How to: Put a Value in a Property - Visual Basic (original) (raw)
You store a value in a property by putting the property name on the left side of an assignment statement.
The property's Set
procedure stores a value, but you do not explicitly call it by name. You use the property just as you would use a variable. Visual Basic makes the calls to the property's procedures.
To store a value in a property
- Use the property name on the left side of an assignment statement.
The following example sets the value of the Visual BasicTimeOfDay
property to noon, implicitly calling itsSet
procedure.
' The following statement calls the Set procedure of the Visual Basic TimeOfDay property.
TimeOfDay = #12:00:00 PM#
- If the property takes arguments, follow the property name with parentheses to enclose the argument list. If there are no arguments, you can optionally omit the parentheses.
- Place the arguments in the argument list within the parentheses, separated by commas. Be sure you supply the arguments in the same order that the property defines the corresponding parameters.
- The value generated on the right side of the assignment statement is stored in the property.
See also
- TimeOfDay
- Property Procedures
- Procedure Parameters and Arguments
- Property Statement
- Differences Between Properties and Variables in Visual Basic
- How to: Create a Property
- How to: Declare a Property with Mixed Access Levels
- How to: Call a Property Procedure
- How to: Declare and Call a Default Property in Visual Basic
- How to: Get a Value from a Property