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FileMaker Pro 4.1 Mac User's Guide

FileMaker Pro 4.1 Mac User's Guide

FileMaker Pro 4.1 Mac User's Guide

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Copying, changing, or deleting buttons<br />

?<br />

Working with Apple events<br />

To Do this in Layout mode<br />

Using ScriptMaker and buttons 5-23<br />

Select a button Use the pointer tool. See “Selecting objects” on page 3-39.<br />

Move a button Using the pointer tool, drag the button. See “Moving objects” on<br />

page 3-44.<br />

Change the appearance<br />

of a button<br />

See “Changing the appearance of objects” on page 3-50.<br />

Change a button label See “Typing text” on page 3-80 and “Changing the appearance of<br />

text” on page 3-88.<br />

Copy a button See “Cutting, copying, and pasting objects” on page 3-45. When<br />

you copy a button, you copy the object and the button definition. If<br />

you copy a button from another file, change the button definition if<br />

fields, layouts, or scripts don’t match.<br />

Change a button<br />

definition<br />

Double-click the button. In the Specify Button dialog box, select a<br />

step and options, and then click OK. To modify a script that the<br />

button performs, see “Changing and duplicating scripts” on page<br />

5-16.<br />

Delete a button Select the button, and then press Delete.<br />

Choose <strong>FileMaker</strong> Help Index from the or Help menu, and then type:<br />

E buttons<br />

Apple events are <strong>Mac</strong> OS commands that automate, customize, and<br />

control many <strong>Mac</strong> OS applications. <strong>FileMaker</strong> <strong>Pro</strong> can send Apple<br />

events to any application that supports them. The application that<br />

receives an Apple event is the target application.<br />

<strong>FileMaker</strong> <strong>Pro</strong> uses ScriptMaker to send Apple events to other<br />

applications. (See “Defining a script to send Apple events” in the next<br />

section.) For example, a script can send Apple events to open a<br />

spreadsheet application, send it data, and then create a chart.<br />

Apple events are grouped into suites. <strong>FileMaker</strong> <strong>Pro</strong> supports the<br />

Required suite, a special subset of the Core, Table, URL, and Database<br />

suites, and its own <strong>FileMaker</strong> suite. It also supports the object model, a<br />

standard way to refer to objects.

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