NamedTarget property

BrowseButton.NamedTarget — Text

Special value available in formulas:

Item

BrowseButton

The button this property is part of, enabling multiple checked items in the app designer to share the same formula and be updated all at once.

Consider the fields Field1 and Field2, which should only be considered to be valid if their values are greater than 4. Without using the Item value, the Valid property of Field1 would need to use the formula Field1 > 4Field1 > 4 and the Valid property of Field2 would need to use the formula Field2 > 4Field2 > 4.

Using Item, both formulas can read Item > 4Item > 4. This is useful if you have many fields and you want to be able to update their formulas all at once. To do so, click their check boxes in Calcapp Creator and make sure that a checked field is selected. Then, when you update a formula for one checked field, you update all the other checked fields too, which is a great timesaver.

Use Item in exactly the same way you'd use the regular name. Button1.VisibleButton1,Visible and Item.VisibleItem,Visible are equivalent, for instance.

The name of the tab or window where a web page is opened. This property has no effect unless Target is set to BrowseTarget.NamedBrowseTarget,Named.

When the button is pressed, a new tab or window is opened if a web page has not already been opened in a tab or window with this name. Otherwise, the web page is opened in the tab or window with this name.

Entering formulas in the inspector

If you use the inspector to enter a value for this property, you can incorporate formulas by enclosing them within {{ and }} markers.

Behind the scenes, Calcapp converts an inspector value with formulas to a single traditional formula. You can view this formula, or edit it directly, by selecting the NamedTarget property from the drop-down menu next to the formula bar.

The examples on this page use traditional formulas, where text strings and other values are joined together using &. To enter them in the inspector, be sure to enclose them within {{ and }} markers. Alternatively, enter them in the formula bar.

Example

"MainWebsite""MainWebsite"

Makes a browse button open its web page in a tab or window with the name MainWebsite.