Class

DesktopRadioGroup


Description

Displays a group of radio buttons.

Tip

if DesktopRadioGroup doesn't fill your needs, consider using DesktopRadioButton instead.

Methods

Name

Parameters

Returns

Shared

AcceptFileDrop

FileType As String

AcceptPictureDrop

AcceptRawDataDrop

Type As String

AcceptTextDrop

Add

Item As DesktopRadioButton

AddAt

index As Integer, Item As DesktopRadioButton

Close

Count

Integer

DrawInto

g As Graphics, x As Integer, y As Integer

ItemAt

index As Integer

DesktopRadioButton

Refresh

immediately As Boolean = False

x As Integer, y As Integer, width As Integer, height As Integer, immediately As Boolean = False

RemoveAll

RemoveAt

Index As Integer

SelectedItem

DesktopRadioButton

SetFocus

Property descriptions


DesktopRadioGroup.Active

Active As Boolean

Indicates whether the control is active.

This property is read-only.

Active is False when the control's window is not in the foreground. When a DesktopWindow is deactivated, its controls are automatically deactivated unless AllowAutoDeactivate is set to False.


DesktopRadioGroup.AllowAutoDeactivate

AllowAutoDeactivate As Boolean

Determines whether the control should be deactivated (on macOS) when the parent window is deactivated. The default is True.


DesktopRadioGroup.AllowTabStop

AllowTabStop As Boolean

If True, the control is in the Tab Order and accepts the focus when the user tabs into it. The default is True. If False, the user cannot tab into it to give it the focus. However, the control can gain the focus by other means, such as the user's clicking on it or by setting the focus in code.

This example removes the control from the Tab Order:

Me.AllowTabStop = False

DesktopRadioGroup.Bold

Bold As Boolean

If True, applies the bold style to the radio button captions in the radio group.

Mac apps can only display font styles that are available. You cannot force a font to display in bold or italic if it does not have bold or italic variations available. In this situation, the Bold property will not affect the font.

This example sets the text to Bold.

Me.Bold = True

DesktopRadioGroup.Enabled

Enabled As Boolean

Determines if the control should be enabled when the owning window is opened.

A disabled control cannot be clicked and cannot receive the focus.

This example disables the control.

Me.Enabled = False

DesktopRadioGroup.FontName

FontName As String

Name of the font used to display captions of the radio buttons in the group.

You can enter any font that is installed on the computer or the names of the two metafonts, "System" and "SmallSystem".

The System font is the font used by the system software as its default font. Different operating systems use different default fonts. If the system software supports both a large and small System font, you can also specify the "SmallSystem" font as your TextFont.

On macOS, "SmallSystem" specifies the OS's smaller system font and may make the control smaller in size as well. On Windows and Linux, "SmallSystem" is the same as "System".

This code sets the FontName property.

Me.FontName = "Helvetica"

DesktopRadioGroup.FontSize

FontSize As Single

Point size of the font used to display captions of the radio buttons in the group.

If you enter zero as the FontSize, your app will use the font size that works best for the platform on which it is running.

This code sets the font size to 16 points.

Me.FontSize = 16

DesktopRadioGroup.FontUnit

FontUnit As FontUnits

The units in which FontSize is measured.


DesktopRadioGroup.Handle

Handle As Ptr

Returns a handle to the control.

This property is read-only.

For interfacing with Mac APIs using Declares, DesktopControl.Handle returns NSViews (except for DesktopToolbar).

On Windows returns the HWND of the control.

On Linux it returns a GtkWidget.

The following gets a handle to the control.

Var p As Ptr = Me.Handle

DesktopRadioGroup.Height

Height As Integer

The height (in points) of the control.

This example sets the height of the control to 100:

Me.Height = 100

DesktopRadioGroup.Horizontal

Horizontal As Boolean

Determines whether the radio buttons will be drawn in a row or a column.


DesktopRadioGroup.Index

Index As Integer

If the control is used in a control set, this specifies the control's index in the set.

This property is read-only.


DesktopRadioGroup.InitialValue

InitialValue As String

A list of the default radio button captions separated by returns.

This property is read-only.

This property is unreadable at runtime because the list is removed from memory once the control is created. You can set a default value for the control by populating the RadioGroup with InitialValue and setting the default value with SelectedRowIndex.


DesktopRadioGroup.Italic

Italic As Boolean

If True, applies the italic style to the captions of the radio buttons in the group.

Mac apps can only display font styles that are available. You cannot force a font to display in bold or italic if it does not have bold or italic variations available. In this situation, the Italic property will not affect the font.

The following sets the Italic property for the control.

Me.Italic = True

DesktopRadioGroup.Left

Left As Integer

The distance from the left side of the control to the left side of its containing window or container.

The following example moves the control 100 points from the left side of the window:

Me.Left = 150

DesktopRadioGroup.LockBottom

LockBottom As Boolean

Determines whether the bottom edge of the control should stay at a set distance from the bottom edge of the parent control, if there is one, or the owning window.

This property can be set in the control's Inspector. The following example sets it in code.

Me.LockBottom = True

DesktopRadioGroup.LockLeft

LockLeft As Boolean

Determines whether the left edge of the control should stay at a set distance from the left edge of the parent control, if there is one, or the owning window.

LockLeft and Locktop default to True when you add a new control to a window. Existing controls will be altered only if LockRight and/or LockBottom are not set. LockLeft has no effect unless LockRight is True.

This property can be set in the control's Inspector. The following example sets it in code.

Me.LockLeft = True

DesktopRadioGroup.LockRight

LockRight As Boolean

Determines whether the right edge of the control should stay at a set distance from the right edge of the parent control, if there is one, or the owning window.

This property can be set in the control's Inspector. The following example sets it in code.

Me.LockRight = True

DesktopRadioGroup.LockTop

LockTop As Boolean

Determines whether the top edge of the control should stay at a set distance from the top edge of the parent control, if there is one, or the owning window.

LockTop and LockLeft default to True when you add a control to a window. Existing controls will be altered only if LockRight and/or LockBottom are not set. LockTop has no effect unless LockBottom is True.

This property can be set in the control's Inspector. The following example sets it in code.

Me.LockTop = True

DesktopRadioGroup.MouseCursor

MouseCursor As MouseCursor

The cursor to be displayed while the mouse is within the control and both the DesktopApplication and DesktopWindow class's MouseCursor properties are Nil.

If the DesktopApplication class's MouseCursor property is not Nil or the DesktopWindow's MouseCursor property is not Nil, then any control's MouseCursor property is ignored. You can use a cursor stored in the Cursors module. On Macintosh, you can also obtain a MouseCursor from a resource file.

This line in the Opening event of the control sets the default cursor to the finger pointer.

Me.MouseCursor = System.Cursors.FingerPointer

DesktopRadioGroup.Name

Name As String

The name of the control. Set the name of the control in the Inspector.

This property is read-only.


DesktopRadioGroup.PanelIndex

PanelIndex As Integer

If the control has been placed on a DesktopTabPanel or DesktopPagePanel control, this is the panel (page/tab) that the control is on. If the control is not on a panel, it returns -1.

The first panel is numbered zero. If the control has been placed on a panel of a DesktopTabPanel or DesktopPagePanel control, it returns the panel number. If the control is not on a DesktopPagePanel or DesktopTabPanel, it returns -1. If you change the PanelIndex to a nonexistent panel, the control will disappear until you give it a PanelIndex value that corresponds to a panel that exists.

If you are looking to change the currently selected panel (page/tab), use DesktopPagePanel.

This code displays the panel index of the control that is on the page.

MessageBox(Me.SelectedPanelIndex.ToString)

DesktopRadioGroup.Parent

Parent As Object

Used to get and set the control's parent control or window.

If the control is on the window, the Parent will be the Window. If the control is on the container, the Parent will be the container. If the control is completed enclosed by another control, the Parent will be that control.

If you do not want the enclosing control to be the parent, set the Parent property of that control to Nil to make it the Window.

If the parent control is somehow in another window, an InvalidParentException will occur.

The following example sets the parent of the control to the window.

Me.Parent = Nil

DesktopRadioGroup.Scope

Scope As Integer

Used to determine whether access to the control is Public (0) or Private (2). The default is Public.

This property is read-only.

Note

This is a designtime-only property and thus can only be set in the Inspector and is not accessible via code.

If the Scope of a control is set to Private, it cannot be accessed from outside its parent window.


DesktopRadioGroup.SelectedIndex

SelectedIndex As Integer

Used to get or set the selected item number

A value of -1 means no selection. SelectedIndex may be set using the Properties pane to set the default value of RadioGroup control. If you use the InitialValue property to populate the RadioGroup control and set a value of SelectedIndex that corresponds to a default item, that item will be displayed in the IDE.

The following example changes the selected item to the third item:

FruitGroup.SelectedIndex = 2

DesktopRadioGroup.TabIndex

TabIndex As Integer

The control's position in the Tab Order. The control with whose TabIndex is 0 will get the focus first.

On macOS, only controls where you enter data from the keyboard typically get the focus. In order to manually set focus to controls that don't allow keyboard entry, go to System Preferences, click on the Keyboard icon then on the Shortcuts tab and then check the Use keyboard navigation to move focus between controls checkbox.

This example sets the control's TabIndex.

Me.TabIndex = 2

DesktopRadioGroup.Tooltip

Tooltip As String

Text of help message displayed as a Windows or Linux "tooltip" or macOS help tag.

The tip/tag is displayed when the user hovers the mouse cursor over the control.

This example adds a tooltip to a control:

Me.Tooltip = "Click to bark."

DesktopRadioGroup.Top

Top As Integer

The distance from the top of the control to the top of its containing window or container.

This example sets the top of the control to 140 points from the top of the window:

Me.Top = 140

DesktopRadioGroup.Transparent

Transparent As Boolean

Determines whether the control is transparent on Windows. The default is False. Has no effect on macOS or Linux.

Transparent controls draw more slowly and use more memory in order to cache the background. Unless you absolutely require transparency, leave this set to False.

For projects that were created prior to 2018r1, this property defaults to True to emulate previous behavior. Consider changing it to False to improve performance if you do not require transparency.


DesktopRadioGroup.Underline

Underline As Boolean

If True, applies the underline style to the captions of the radio buttons in the group.

This code underlines the captions of the radio buttons.

Me.Underline = True

DesktopRadioGroup.Visible

Visible As Boolean

Determines whether the control is visible when its owning window is opened. The default is True: the control is visible.

The following code makes the control invisible:

Me.Visible = False

DesktopRadioGroup.Width

Width As Integer

The width (in points) of the control.

The following example resizes the control:

Me.Width = 200

DesktopRadioGroup.Window

Window As DesktopWindow

The control's parent window.

This property is read-only.

This code gets the parent window's Title property.

MessageBox(Me.Window.Title)

Method descriptions


DesktopRadioGroup.AcceptFileDrop

AcceptFileDrop(FileType As String)

Permits documents of type FileType to be dropped on the control. FileType must be a file type that you defined in via the FileType class or the File Type Sets Editor.

This code in the Opening event makes it possible for the user to drop either a picture or a file that is a jpeg image. The File Type Sets editor was used to define the “image/jpeg” file type. It is one of the “Common File Types” that is available in the editor.

Me.AcceptPictureDrop
Me.AcceptFileDrop("image/jpeg")

To restrict file drops to just folders (and not files), you can put this code in the DragEnter event:

If Not obj.FolderItem.IsFolder Then Return True

DesktopRadioGroup.AcceptPictureDrop

AcceptPictureDrop

Permits pictures to be dropped on the control.

If a control should accept pictures in a drag and drop, then AcceptPictureDrop needs to be called prior to the drop. Typically, it is in the Opening event of the control itself. For example, the line:

Me.AcceptPictureDrop

in the Opening event of the control that will receive the dragged pictures is needed. When the picture is dropped, the DropObject event is called and this is where you will put your code to handle the drop.

Opening Event:

Me.AcceptPictureDrop

DropObject Event:

If obj.PictureAvailable Then
  Me.Backdrop = obj.Picture
End If

DesktopRadioGroup.AcceptRawDataDrop

AcceptRawDataDrop(Type As String)

Permits data (of the Type specified) to be dropped on the control.

The following specfies a generic file type defined in the File Type Sets editor.

Me.AcceptRawDataDrop("????")

DesktopRadioGroup.AcceptTextDrop

AcceptTextDrop

Permits text to be dropped on the control.

This line in the Opening event of a control that can accept dragged text.

Me.AcceptTextDrop

DesktopRadioGroup.Add

Add(Item As DesktopRadioButton)

Adds Item as a new radio button in the group.

The following example in the Opening event of the control adds two Radio Buttons to the group.

Var rb1 As New DesktopRadioButton
rb1.Caption = "Frodo"
Me.Add(rb1)
Var rb2 As New DesktopRadioButton
rb2.Caption = "Sam"
Me.add(rb2)

DesktopRadioGroup.AddAt

AddAt(index As Integer, Item As DesktopRadioButton)

Creates a new radio button at index (moving the existing Radio Buttons down).

The following example adds a radio button at the 4th position.

Var rb As New DesktopRadioButton
rb.Caption = "Pippin"
RadioGroup1.AddAt(3,rb)

DesktopRadioGroup.Close

Close

Closes a control.

Closing a control permanently removes the control from memory, making it impossible to access. You can close both non-indexed controls and indexed controls. When you close an indexed control, the indexes for the remaining controls will shift downward so that the indexes start with zero and are consecutive.

The following code closes the control. When this is executed from a visible control, the control disappears from the window.

Me.Close

DesktopRadioGroup.Count

Count As Integer

Returns the number Radio Buttons in the group.


DesktopRadioGroup.DrawInto

DrawInto(g As Graphics, x As Integer, y As Integer)

Draws the contents of the control into the specified Graphics context. The parameters x and y are the coordinates of the top, left corner.

Note

DrawInto will only work if the control is on a window or container.

This example draws the current control into the Graphics of a Picture and then displays it as the Backdrop of a Canvas:

Var p As New Picture(Me.Width, Me.Height)
Me.DrawInto(p.Graphics, 0, 0)
Canvas1.Backdrop = p

DesktopRadioGroup.ItemAt

ItemAt(index As Integer) As DesktopRadioButton

Returns the DesktopRadioButton at the index passed.


DesktopRadioGroup.Refresh

Refresh(immediately As Boolean = False)

Redraws the portion specified of the contents of the control the next time the OS redraws the control or immediately if True is passed.

If you are calling this so frequently that you experience a slowdown in your code, pass True for the immediately parameter.

Calling this method causes the Render event to fire.

Refresh the entire area immediately:

Me.Refresh(True)

DesktopRadioGroup.Refresh

Refresh(x As Integer, y As Integer, width As Integer, height As Integer, immediately As Boolean = False)

Redraws the portion specified of the contents of the control the next time the OS redraws the control or immediately if True is passed.

Refresh a portion of the area the next time the OS redraws the control:

Me.Refresh(100, 150, 200, 300)

DesktopRadioGroup.RemoveAll

RemoveAll

Removes all Radio Buttons in the group.


DesktopRadioGroup.RemoveAt

RemoveAt(Index As Integer)

Removes the Radio Button at the specified index.

The following example removes the third Radio Button (index position 2) from the radio group.

Me.RemoveAt(2)

DesktopRadioGroup.SelectedItem

SelectedItem As DesktopRadioButton

Returns the selected Radio Button.


DesktopRadioGroup.SetFocus

SetFocus

If applicable, sets the focus to the DesktopUIControl. KeyDown events are directed to the control.

If the control cannot get the focus on the platform on which the application is running, SetFocus does nothing. The SetFocus method of the DesktopWindow class or the ClearFocus method can be used to remove the focus from the control that currently has the focus, leaving no control with the focus.

Note

On the Mac you need Full Keyboard Access turned on in System Preferences (Keyboard->Shortcuts) in order to manually set focus to non-text controls.

The following example in the Opening event sets the focus to the that control. If another control has the focus when this line is executed, then the user sees this control gets the focus.

Me.SetFocus

Event descriptions


DesktopRadioGroup.Closing

Closing

The control is closing.


DesktopRadioGroup.ConstructContextualMenu

ConstructContextualMenu(Base As DesktopMenuItem, x As Integer, y As Integer) As Boolean

This event is called when it is appropriate to display a contextual menu for the control.

This event handler is the recommended way to handle contextual menus because this event figures out whether the user has requested the contextual menu, regardless of how they did it. Depending on platform, it might be in the MouseUp or MouseDown event and it might be a right+click or by pressing the contextual menu key on the keyboard, for example.

Base is analogous to the menu bar for the contextual menu. Any items you add to Base will be shown as menu items. If you return False, the event is passed up the parent hierarchy.

If you return True, the contextual menu is displayed. The parameters x and y are the mouse locations. If the event was fired because of a non-mouse event, then x and y are both set to -1. See the example of a contextual menu in the following section.

The following ConstructContextualMenu event handler builds a menu with three menu items plus a submenu with three additional menu items.

' Add some items
base.AddMenu(New DesktopMenuItem("Test 1"))
base.AddMenu(New DesktopMenuItem("Test 2"))
base.AddMenu(New DesktopMenuItem("Test 3"))

' Add a Separator
base.AddMenu(New DesktopMenuItem(DesktopMenuItem.TextSeparator))

' Add a sub menu
Var submenu As New DesktopMenuItem("SubMenu")
submenu.AddMenu(New DesktopMenuItem("SubMenu Test 1"))
submenu.AddMenu(New DesktopMenuItem("SubMenu Test 2"))
submenu.AddMenu(New DesktopMenuItem("SubMenu Test 3"))
base.AddMenu(submenu)

' Add a Separator
base.AddMenu(New DesktopMenuItem(DesktopMenuItem.TextSeparator))

Return True

DesktopRadioGroup.ContextualMenuItemSelected

ContextualMenuItemSelected(HitItem As DesktopMenuItem) As Boolean

Fires when a contextual menuitem selectedItem was selected but the MenuItemSelected event and the MenuHandler for the DesktopMenuItem did not handle the menu selection.

This event gives you a chance to handle the menu selection by inspecting the menuitem's Text or Tag properties to see which item was selected. Use this in conjunction with ConstructContextualMenu if you have not specified the MenuItemSelected event or the Menu Handler for the items on the contextual menu. See the example of a contextual menu in the examples for the DesktopUIControl class.

Return True if this event has handled the item the user chose from the contextual menu. Returning False will cause the control's parent to execute its ContextualMenuItemSelected event. This can be handy if you have the same contextual menu for several controls who share the same Parent (several on the same window for example). By returning False you can handle them all in a single event.

This simple event handler displays the value of the selected menu item.

If selectedItem <> Nil Then MessageBox(selectedItem.Text)
Return True

DesktopRadioGroup.DragEnter

DragEnter(obj As DragItem, Action As DragItem.Types) As Boolean

Fires when the passed DragItem enters the DesktopUIControl.

Returns a Boolean. Return True from this event to prevent the drop from occurring.

The Action parameter specifies the type of drag action.

To restrict file drops to just folders (and not files), you can put this code in the DragEnter event:

If Not obj.FolderItem.IsFolder Then Return True

DesktopRadioGroup.DragExit

DragExit(obj As DragItem, Action As DragItem.Types)

Fires when the passed DragItem exits the DesktopUIControl.

The Obj parameter is the item being dragged. The Action parameter specifies the type of drag action.


DesktopRadioGroup.DragOver

DragOver(x As Integer, y As Integer, obj As DragItem, Action As DragItem.Types) As Boolean

Fires when the DragItem is over the DesktopUIControl.

The Obj parameter is the object being dragged. The coordinates x and y are relative to the DesktopUIControl. Returns a Boolean. Return True from this event to prevent the drop from occurring.

The Action parameter specifies the type of drag action, which is typically done by holding down a modifier key (Shift, Alt, Option, Command, etc.) while doing the drag.


DesktopRadioGroup.DropObject

DropObject(Obj As DragItem Action As DragItem.Types)

The item represented by Obj has been dropped on the control.

The Obj parameter is the object being dragged. The Action parameter specifies the type of drag action.

The following DropObject event handler can handle either a dropped picture or a dropped file. The type of file that it can handle needs to have been specified in a call to AcceptFileDrop prior to the drop, for example, in the Opening event.

If Obj.PictureAvailable Then
  Me.Image = obj.Picture
ElseIf Obj.FolderItemAvailable Then
  Me.Image = Picture.Open(obj.FolderItem)
End If

DesktopRadioGroup.FocusLost

FocusLost

The control has lost the focus.

Note

On macOS, controls other than text fields and lists will accept and lose focus only if the full keyboard access option is enabled in System Preferences/Keyboard.


DesktopRadioGroup.FocusReceived

FocusReceived

The control has received the focus and has a selection rectangle around it.

Note

On macOS, controls other than text fields and lists will accept focus only if the full keyboard access option is enabled in System Preferences/Keyboard.


DesktopRadioGroup.KeyDown

KeyDown(Key As String) As Boolean

The user has pressed the Key passed while the control has the focus.

Returning True prevents the KeyDown event on the parent control (usually the window) from executing. Returning False results in the execution of the KeyDown event of the parent control.


DesktopRadioGroup.KeyUp

KeyUp(Key As String)

Fires when the passed Key is released in the control that has the focus.

It is not guaranteed to be the same key that received the KeyDown event.


DesktopRadioGroup.MouseDown

MouseDown(X As Integer, Y As Integer) As Boolean

The mouse button was pressed inside the control's region at the location passed in to x, y.

This event fires repeatedly while the mouse button is being held down.

The coordinates x and y are local to the control, i.e. they represent the position of the mouse click relative to the upper-left corner or the control.

Return True if you are going to handle the MouseDown. In such a case:

  • The Pressed event, if any, will not execute and the state of the object will not change.

  • You will receive the MouseUp event.

If you return False, the system handles the MouseDown so the MouseUp event handler do not get called.

The MouseDown event uses the DragItem constructor when the user drags the contents of the control. It is:

Var d As DragItem
d = New DragItem(Self, Me.Left, Me.Top, Me.Width, Me.Height)
d.Picture = Me.Image
d.Drag ' Allow the drag

DesktopRadioGroup.MouseDrag

MouseDrag(X As Integer, Y As Integer)

The mouse button was pressed inside the control and moved (dragged) at the location local to the control passed in to x, y.

This event fires repeatedly while the mouse button is down regardless of whether or not the mouse coordinates are changing.

This event will not occur unless you return True in the MouseDown event.


DesktopRadioGroup.MouseEnter

MouseEnter

The mouse has entered the area of the control.


DesktopRadioGroup.MouseExit

MouseExit

The mouse has left the area of the control.


DesktopRadioGroup.MouseMove

MouseMove(X As Integer, Y As Integer)

The mouse has moved within the control to the coordinates passed. The coordinates are local to the control, not to the window.


DesktopRadioGroup.MouseUp

MouseUp(X As Integer, Y As Integer)

The mouse button was released. Use the x and y parameters to determine if the mouse button was released within the control's boundaries.

Note

This event will not occur unless you return True in the MouseDown event. The return value is ignored.

The parameters x and y are local coordinates, i.e. they represent the position of the mouse click relative to the upper-left corner or the control. Mouse clicks that are released to the left or above a control are negative.


DesktopRadioGroup.MouseWheel

MouseWheel(X As Integer, Y As Integer, DeltaX As Integer, DeltaY As Integer) As Boolean

The mouse wheel has been moved.

The parameters X and Y are the mouse coordinates relative to the control that has received the event. The parameters DeltaX and DeltaY hold the number of scroll lines the wheel has been moved horizontally and vertically, as defined by the operating system. DeltaX is positive when the user scrolls right and negative when scrolling to the left. DeltaY is positive when the user scrolls down and negative when scrolling up.

Returns a Boolean. Return True to prevent the event from propagating further.


DesktopRadioGroup.Opening

Opening

The control is about to be displayed. Use this event to initialize a control.

The Opening event is called after the Constructor.

Be warned that initializing control property values using the Constructor instead of the Opening event may result in those property values being overwritten by what is set in the Inspector. For best results, use the Opening event for control initialization rather than the control Constructor.

If the control is supposed to handle drag and drop, you need to tell it which type of item it needs to be able to handle. The following example informs the control that pictures and files can be dropped on it. The type of the file it needs to support is specified via the File Types Editor.

Sub Opening()
  Me.AcceptPictureDrop
  Me.AcceptFileDrop("JPEG")
End Sub

DesktopRadioGroup.SelectionChanged

SelectionChanged(button As DesktopRadioButton)

The selected radio button has changed.

Use the DesktopRadioGroup property to get the index of the newly selected value or the DesktopRadioGroup method to get the newly selected radio button.

Get the caption of the newly selected radio button:

Var newCaption As String
newCaption = Me.SelectedItem.Caption

Notes

Sample code

This code in the Opening event handler populates a radio group and sets the initial value to the current month:

Me.RemoveAll
Var months() As String = Array("January", "February", "March", "April", "May", "June", "July", "August", "September", "October", "November", "December")
For Each m As String In months
  Var rb As New DesktopRadioButton
  rb.Caption = m
  Me.Add(rb)
Next

Var d As DateTime = DateTime.Now
Me.SelectedIndex = d.Month - 1 ' Select current month

Examine the value of SelectedIndex in the SelectionChanged event handler to determine which item was selected.

This code adds an item to PopupMenu:

Var rb As New DesktopRadioButton
rb.Caption = "October"
RadioGroup1.Add(rb)

This code populates the Tag identifier with a sequence number:

For i As Integer = 0 To Me.Count - 1
  Me.ItemAt(i).Tag = i
Next

Since Tag is a Variant, you must first convert it to an Integer if you want to compare it to another integer. Do this with a simple assignment statement such as:

Var recID As Integer
recID = RadioGroup1.ItemAt(1).Tag

Then compare recID to another Integer.

Changing the selected item in a RadioGroup:

RadioGroup1.SelectedIndex = 3 ' Selects the 4th radio button in the group

Displaying the Tag of the selected menu item:

TextField1.Text = RadioGroup1.ItemAt(RadioGroup1.SelectedIndex).Tag

Compatibility

Desktop projects on all supported operating systems.

See also

DesktopUIControl parent class; DesktopRadioButton control; DesktopUIControl class.