Active Property

Applies to TestComplete 15.70, last modified on December 17, 2024
The Network Suite functionality is deprecated. We don’t recommend using it for distributed testing. Consider using a CI/CD system for managing distributed tests. See Migrating Distributed Tests to CI/CD Systems for details. In case you need to run web tests on multiple environments in parallel, you can also try using your project’s Execution Plan.

Description

The Active property specifies whether the given task is enabled or disabled (the Active property of the task). A task must be enabled in order to run it via the job to which it belongs or via the entire network suite to which the job belongs.

Declaration

TaskObj.Active

Read-Write Property Boolean
TaskObj An expression, variable or parameter that specifies a reference to a Task object

Applies To

The property is applied to the following object:

Property Value

True if the task is enabled, and False otherwise.

Example

For instance, you can check whether the desired task is enabled before running it:

JavaScript, JScript

function Test()
{
  var Task = NetworkSuite.Jobs(0).Tasks.ItemByName("Task1");
  if (Task.Active)
    Task.Run(true);
}

Python

def Test():
  Task = NetworkSuite.Jobs.Items[0].Tasks.ItemByName["Task1"]
  if Task.Active:
    Task.Run(True)

VBScript

Sub Test
  Set Task = NetworkSuite.Jobs(0).Tasks.ItemByName("Task1")
  If Task.Active Then
    Task.Run(True)
  End If
End Sub

DelphiScript

procedure Test;
var Task : OleVariant;
begin
  Task := NetworkSuite.Jobs[0].Tasks.ItemByName['Task1'];
  if Task.Active then
    Task.Run(True);
end;

C++Script, C#Script

function Test()
{
  var Task = NetworkSuite["Jobs"](0)["Tasks"]["ItemByName"]("Task1");
  if (Task["Active"])
    Task["Run"](true);
}

See Also

Distributed Testing
Task.Run
Task.Stop

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