EventList.AddAdvise Method (Visio)
Adds an Event object to the EventList collection of the source object whose events you want to receive. When selected events occur, the source object notifies your sink object.
Version Information
Version Added: Visio 4.1
Syntax
expression .AddAdvise(EventCode, SinkIUnkOrIDisp, IIDSink, TargetArgs)
expression A variable that represents an EventList object.
Parameters
Name |
Required/Optional |
Data Type |
Description |
---|---|---|---|
EventCode |
Required |
Integer |
The event(s) that generate notifications. |
SinkIUnkOrIDisp |
Required |
Variant |
A reference to a COM interface on the object that is to receive event notifications. |
IIDSink |
Required |
String |
Reserved for future use. Must be "". |
TargetArgs |
Required |
String |
The string that is passed to your Event object to set its TargetArgs property. |
Return Value
Event
Remarks
Event objects created with the AddAdvise method have an Action property of visActCodeAdvise. They are not persistent, that is, they cannot be stored with a Visio document and must be re-created at run time.
The source object whose EventList collection contains the Event object establishes the scope in which the events are reported. Events are reported for the source object and objects lower in the object model hierarchy. For example, to receive notification when a particular document is saved, add an Event object for the DocumentSaved event to the EventList collection of that document. To receive notification when any document is opened in an instance of the application, add the Event object to the EventList collection of the Application object.
Creating Event objects is a common way to handle events from C++ or other non-Microsoft Visual Basic solutions. When you use the Visual Basic WithEvents keyword to handle events, all the events in a source object's event set fire. When you create Event objects to handle events, however, your program will only be notified of the events you select. Depending on your solution, this may result in improved performance.
The EventCode argument is often a combination of constants. For example, visEvtMod+visEvtCell is the event code for the CellChanged event. Event constants are declared by the Visio type library and are prefixed with visEvt. To find an event code for the event you want to create, see Event codes.
The arguments passed to the AddAdvise method set the initial values of the Event object's Event, Action (visCodeRunAddAdvise), and TargetArgs properties.
Beginning with Visio 2002, you can use event filters to refine the events that you receive in your program. You can filter events by object, cell, ranges of cells, or command ID. For details about using event filters, see the method topics prefixed with SetFilter and GetFilter.
Event objects created with the AddAdvise method have an Action property of visActCodeAdvise. They are not persistent, that is, they cannot be stored with a Visio document and must be re-created at run time.
The source object whose EventList collection contains the Event object establishes the scope in which the events are reported. Events are reported for the source object and objects lower in the object model hierarchy. For example, to receive notification when a particular document is saved, add an Event object for the DocumentSaved event to the EventList collection of that document. To receive notification when any document is opened in an instance of the application, add the Event object to the EventList collection of the Application object.
Creating Event objects is a common way to handle events from C++ or other non-Microsoft Visual Basic solutions. When you use the Visual Basic WithEvents keyword to handle events, all the events in a source object's event set fire. When you create Event objects to handle events, however, your program will only be notified of the events you select. Depending on your solution, this may result in improved performance.
The EventCode argument is often a combination of constants. For example, visEvtMod+visEvtCell is the event code for the CellChanged event. Event constants are declared by the Visio type library and are prefixed with visEvt. To find an event code for the event you want to create, see Event codes.
The arguments passed to the AddAdvise method set the initial values of the Event object's Event, Action (visCodeRunAddAdvise), and TargetArgs properties.
Beginning with Visio 2002, you can use event filters to refine the events that you receive in your program. You can filter events by object, cell, ranges of cells, or command ID. For details about using event filters, see the method topics prefixed with SetFilter and GetFilter.
Enabling your program to handle event notifications from Microsoft Visual Basic or Visual Basic for Applications
To handle notifications, you should create a class module that implements the IVisEventProc interface and then create an instance of this class to pass as an argument to the AddAdvise method.
The IVisEventProc interface contains a single function with the following declaration:
Implements IVisEventProc
Private Function IVisEventProc_VisEventProc( _
ByVal nEventCode As Integer, _
ByVal pSourceObj As Object, _
ByVal nEventID As Long, _
ByVal nEventSeqNum As Long, _
ByVal pSubjectObj As Object, _
ByVal vMoreInfo As Variant) As Variant
End Function
Following are descriptions of the arguments to VisEventProc .
Argument |
Description |
---|---|
nEventCode |
The event(s) that occurred. You can provide a distinct object for each event or provide a single object that receives all notifications and switches internally based on nEventCode. |
pSourceObj |
The object whose EventList collection contains the Event object that triggered the notification. |
nEventID |
The unique identifier of the Event object within the EventList collection. (Unlike the Index property of the EventList collection, nEventID does not change as Event objects are added to or deleted from the collection.) You can get the Event object from VisEventProc by using the following code:
|
nEventSeqNum |
The ordinal position of the event with respect to the sequence of events that have occurred in the calling instance of the application. The first event that occurs in a Visio instance has a sequence number of 1, the second event 2, and so forth. In some cases, you can use the sequence number in conjunction with the EventInfo property to obtain more information about the event. |
pSubjectObj |
The object that the event is about. For example, the subject of a ShapeAdded event is a Shape object representing the shape that was just added, while the subject of a BeforeSelectionDelete event is a Selection object in which the shapes that are about to be deleted are selected. |
vMoreInfo |
Additional information about the subject of the event. For many events, it is a string similar to the command line the application passes the add-ons it executes. If the notification does not include additional information, this parameter is set to Nothing. For details about notification parameters for a particular event, see the particular event topic in this Automation Reference. |
If nEventCode identifies a query event (events prefixed with Query), return True to cancel the event, and False to allow it to happen. The value is arbitrary for other events. If no explicit value is returned, Microsoft Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) returns an empty Variant, which Visio interprets as False.
The connection between the source object and the Event object exists until one of the following occurs:
The program deletes the Event object.
The program releases the last reference to the source object. (The EventList collection and Event objects hold a reference on their source object.)
The application terminates.
Beginning with Visio 2000, VisEventProc is defined as a function that returns a value. However, Visio only looks at return values from calls to VisEventProc that are passed a query event code. Event objects that provide VisEventProc through IDispatch require no change. To modify existing event handlers so that they can handle query events, change the Sub procedure to a Function procedure and return the appropriate value. (For details about query events, see this reference for event topics prefixed with Query.)
Example
This example shows how to create a class module to handle events fired by a source object in Microsoft Office Visio, for example, the Document object. The module consists of the function VisEventProc, which uses a Select Case block to check for three events: DocumentSaved, PageAdded, and ShapesDeleted. Other events fall under the default case (Case Else). Each Case block constructs a string (strMessage) that contains the name and event code of the event that fired. Finally, the function displays the string in the Immediate window.
Copy this sample code into a new class module in Microsoft Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) or Visual Basic, naming the module clsEventSink. You can then use the event-sink module that follows to create an instance of the clsEventSink class and Event objects that send notifications of event firings to the class instance.
Implements Visio.IVisEventProc
'Declare visEvtAdd as a 2-byte value
'to avoid a run-time overflow error
Private Const visEvtAdd% = &H8000
Private Function IVisEventProc_VisEventProc( _
ByVal nEventCode As Integer, _
ByVal pSourceObj As Object, _
ByVal nEventID As Long, _
ByVal nEventSeqNum As Long, _
ByVal pSubjectObj As Object, _
ByVal vMoreInfo As Variant) As Variant
Dim strMessage As String
'Find out which event fired
Select Case nEventCode
Case visEvtCodeDocSave
strMessage = "DocumentSaved (" & nEventCode & ")"
Case (visEvtPage + visEvtAdd)
strMessage = "PageAdded (" & nEventCode & ")"
Case visEvtCodeShapeDelete
strMessage = "ShapesDeleted(" & nEventCode & ")"
Case Else
strMessage = "Other (" & nEventCode & ")"
End Select
'Display the event name and the event code
Debug.Print strMessage
End Function
The following VBA module shows how to use the AddAdvise method to sink events. The module contains two public procedures.
The CreateEventObjects procedure creates an instance of a sink-object (event-handling) class named clsEventSink that gets passed to the AddAdvise method, and that receives notifications of events. In addition, the procedure creates three Event objects to send notifications of firings of three events sourced by the Document object to the sink object: DocumentSaved, PageAdded, and ShapesDeleted.
The DeleteEventObjects procedure deletes these Event objects when your program is finished using them.
The clsEventSink class implements the IVisEventProc interface.
The example assumes that there is an active document in the Visio application window.
Option Explicit
Private mEventSink As clsEventSink
Dim vsoDocumentEvents As Visio.EventList
Dim vsoDocumentSavedEvent As Visio.Event
Dim vsoPageAddedEvent As Visio.Event
Dim vsoShapesDeletedEvent As Visio.Event
'Declare visEvtAdd as a 2-byte value
'to avoid a run-time overflow error
Private Const visEvtAdd% = &H8000
Public Sub CreateEventObjects()
'Create an instance of the clsEventSink class
'to pass to the AddAdvise method.
Set mEventSink = New clsEventSink
'Get the EventList collection of the active document.
Set vsoDocumentEvents = ActiveDocument.EventList
'Add Event objects that will send notifications.
'Add an Event object for the DocumentSaved event.
Set vsoDocumentSavedEvent= vsoDocumentEvents.AddAdvise( _
visEvtCodeDocSave, mEventSink, "", "Document saved...")
'Add an Event object for the PageAdded event.
Set vsoPageAddedEvent= vsoDocumentEvents.AddAdvise( _
visEvtAdd + visEvtPage, mEventSink, "", "Page added...")
'Add an Event object for the ShapesDeleted event.
Set vsoShapesDeletedEvent = vsoDocumentEvents.AddAdvise( _
visEvtCodeShapeDelete, mEventSink, "", "Shapes deleted...")
End Sub
Public Sub DeleteEventObjects()
'Delete the Event object for the DocumentSaved event.
vsoDocumentSavedEvent.Delete
Set vsoDocumentSavedEvent = Nothing
'Delete the Event object for the PageAdded event.
vsoPageAddedEvent.Delete
Set vsoPageAddedEvent = Nothing
'Delete the Event object for the ShapesDeleted event.
vsoShapesDeletedEvent.Delete
Set vsoShapesDeletedEvent = Nothing
End Sub