TestComplete samples (both built-in and additional) are located in the <Users>\Public\Public Documents\TestComplete 14 Samples folder.
Some file managers display the Public Documents folder as Documents.
User forms can be used during the test run to input and output information. You can obtain the data inputted into the form or populate a form with data during the test execution. The following sections describe how to access forms, form components and their properties from scripts.
Note that you can also perform the same actions with user forms from your keyword tests using the Call Object Method, Run Code Snippet or Run Script Routine operation with appropriate program objects, their methods and properties (see below).
Addressing Forms
TestComplete provides a top-level program object called UserForms
that lets you access user forms included in the current project.
Forms are child objects of the UserForms
object, as you can see in the Code Completion window. You can address forms by their names via the UserForms
object. Another way to address a form is to use the UserForms.FormByName
property with the form name as a parameter. Both notations are equivalent and return the UserForm
object that represents the desired form:
JavaScript, JScript
var form;
// The following two lines are equivalent
form = UserForms.SampleForm;
form = UserForms.FormByName("SampleForm");
Python
# The following two lines are equivalent
form = UserForms.SampleForm
form = UserForms.FormByName["SampleForm"]
VBScript
' The following two lines are equivalent
Set form = UserForms.SampleForm
Set form = UserForms.FormByName("SampleForm")
DelphiScript
var form : OleVariant;
...
// The following two lines are equivalent
form := UserForms.SampleForm;
form := UserForms.FormByName['SampleForm'];
C++Script, C#Script
var form;
// The following two lines are equivalent
form = UserForms["SampleForm"];
form = UserForms["FormByName"]("SampleForm");
Note: | The use of the UserForms object name is required. |
Addressing Form Components
All components of the form are the child objects of the UserForm
object that represents the form. You can specify the component name directly after the form name or as the parameter of the ComponentByName
property of the UserForm
object:
JavaScript, JScript
var btn;
// The following two lines are equivalent
btn = UserForms.SampleForm.buttonOK;
btn = UserForms.SampleForm.ComponentByName("buttonOK");
Python
# The following two lines are equivalent
btn = UserForms.SampleForm.buttonOK
btn = UserForms.SampleForm.ComponentByName["buttonOK"]
VBScript
' The following two lines are equivalent
Set btn = UserForms.SampleForm.buttonOK
Set btn = UserForms.SampleForm.ComponentByName("buttonOK")
DelphiScript
var btn : OleVariant;
...
// The following two lines are equivalent
btn := UserForms.SampleForm.buttonOK;
btn := UserForms.SampleForm.ComponentByName['buttonOK'];
C++Script, C#Script
// The following two lines are equivalent
btn = UserForms["SampleForm"]["buttonOK"];
btn = UserForms["SampleForm"]["ComponentByName"]("buttonOK");
Note: | The use of the UserForms object name and the form name is required. |
To enumerate form components, use the Component
and ComponentCount
properties of the UserForm
object. The Component
property returns the form component by its index and the ComponentCount
property returns the total number of form components.
The UserForm
object provides three more properties for accessing and enumerating form components: ChildControlByName
, ChildControl
and ChildControlCount
. They are similar to the corresponding ComponentNNN
properties except for the following: The ChildControlNNN
properties are used to access controls, that is components (text boxes, buttons, etc.) that are located on the form. Components that do not occupy a place on the form, such as dialogs, cannot be obtained via these properties. Another difference is that the ChildControlNNN
property only lets you access those controls that are situated directly on the form and thus are child controls of the form, whereas the ComponentNNN
property lets you address all form controls, even if they reside on another component (for instance, on a TcxPanel object), but not on the form itself.
Components that are not situated directly on the form, but are on the container component such as a panel or group box, can be accessed as the form's child objects. If you need to preserve the actual hierarchy of objects, use the ChildControlByName
property of the container component:
JavaScript, JScript
Python
cb = UserForms.SampleForm.ChildControlByName["checkBox"]
VBScript
DelphiScript
...
cb := UserForms.SampleForm.panel.ChildControlByName['checkBox'];
C++Script, C#Script
Displaying Forms on the Screen
There is no need to create a user form instance before displaying the form. TestComplete always creates one form instance when the test starts. So, you can display or hide a form, but not create and delete it as you would do in Visual C++, C# or Delphi.
Note: | Since only one instance of a form exists, you can display only one instance of a form. You cannot display several instances of the same form. |
There are two modes where a form can be displayed: modeless and modal. If a form is displayed as a modeless window, the test execution continues while the form is displayed. You can use modeless forms to display helper information, for example, the current progress of a time-consuming operation towards completion. When the form is displayed as a modal window (dialog), the test execution is paused until the form is closed. Modal forms can be used to input data (such as test options) as well as to output information (for example, test summary).
To display the form as a modeless window, you can either call the Show
method or set the form’s Visible
property to True:
JavaScript, JScript
// Use any of the following lines to display the modeless form.
UserForms.SampleForm.Visible = true;
UserForms.SampleForm.Show();
Python
# Use any of the following lines to display the modeless form.
UserForms.SampleForm.Visible = True
UserForms.SampleForm.Show()
VBScript
' Use any of the following lines to display the modeless form.
UserForms.SampleForm.Visible = True
UserForms.SampleForm.Show
DelphiScript
// Use any of the following lines to display the modeless form.
UserForms.SampleForm.Visible := true;
UserForms.SampleForm.Show;
C++Script, C#Script
// Use any of the following lines to display the modeless form.
UserForms["SampleForm"]["Visible"] = true;
UserForms["SampleForm"]["Show"]();
Note that after the modeless form appears on screen, the test execution continues. This is because the Show
method does not wait until the form is closed and immediately resumes test execution. Thus, a form displayed by the Show
method remains visible until it is minimized or closed or until the test execution ends.
When you need to close (hide) the modeless form, call the Hide
method or set the Visible
property to False:
JavaScript, JScript
// Use any of the following lines to hide the modeless form.
UserForms.SampleForm.Visible = false;
UserForms.SampleForm.Hide();
Python
# Use any of the following lines to hide the modeless form.
UserForms.SampleForm.Visible = False
UserForms.SampleForm.Hide()
VBScript
' Use any of the following lines to display the modeless form.
UserForms.SampleForm.Visible = False
UserForms.SampleForm.Hide
DelphiScript
// Use any of the following lines to hide the modeless form.
UserForms.SampleForm.Visible := false;
UserForms.SampleForm.Hide;
C++Script, C#Script
// Use any of the following lines to hide the modeless form.
UserForms["SampleForm"]["Visible"] = false;
UserForms["SampleForm"]["Hide"]();
Note: | The form’s property values and properties of form’s components are stored in the corresponding program object during the test run. The next time the form is displayed, all of its components will have the same state and hold the same data as before the form was closed. |
To display the form as a modal dialog, use the UserForm.ShowModal
method. This method displays the form on screen, waits until the form is closed and returns the result indicating which button the user pressed to close the form (for example, OK or Cancel). Note that in order for the button to close the form, its ModalResult
property should be set to anything other than mrNone
.
JavaScript, JScript
// Display the form as a modal dialog
UserForms.SampleForm.ShowModal();
Python
# Display the form as a modal dialog
UserForms.SampleForm.ShowModal()
VBScript
' Display the form as a modal dialog
UserForms.SampleForm.ShowModal
DelphiScript
// Display the form as a modal dialog
UserForms.SampleForm.ShowModal;
C++Script, C#Script
// Display the form as a modal dialog
UserForms["SampleForm"]["ShowModal"]();
Obtaining Dialog Result
When you display the form as a modal dialog using the ShowModal
method, this method returns the form’s dialog result. The dialog result means the final result of user interaction with the form. It indicates which button the user pressed to close the form, for example, OK, Cancel, Yes, No and so on. You can use the dialog result to decide what actions should be performed after the form is closed. For instance, you can start a test if the user pressed OK and skip the test if the user pressed Cancel, like in the following example:
JavaScript
// Display the form and determine which button was pressed
var mr = UserForms.SampleForm.ShowModal();
// Run tests if the tester pressed OK button
if (equal(mr, mrOk))
RunTests();
else
Log.Warning ("The test was cancelled.");
JScript
// Display the form and determine which button was pressed
var mr = UserForms.SampleForm.ShowModal();
// Run tests if the tester pressed OK button
if (mr == mrOk)
RunTests();
else
Log.Warning ("The test was cancelled.");
Python
# Display the form and determine which button was pressed
mr = UserForms.SampleForm.ShowModal()
# Run tests if the tester pressed OK button
if mr == mrOk:
RunTests()
else:
Log.Warning ("The test was cancelled.")
VBScript
' Display the form and determine which button was pressed
mr = UserForms.SampleForm.ShowModal
' Run tests if the tester pressed OK button
If mr = mrOk Then
RunTests
Else
Log.Warning "The test was cancelled."
End If
DelphiScript
var mr : integer;
begin
// Display the form and determine which button was pressed
mr := UserForms.SampleForm.ShowModal;
// Run tests if the tester pressed OK button
if mr = mrOk then
RunTests
else
Log.Warning ('The test was cancelled.');
end;
C++Script, C#Script
// Display the form and determine which button was pressed
var mr = UserForms["SampleForm"]["ShowModal"]();
// Run tests if the tester pressed OK button
if (mr == mrOk)
RunTests();
else
Log["Warning"] ("The test was cancelled.");
To obtain the form’s dialog result from scripts or keyword tests, you can also use the UserForm.ModalResult
property:
JavaScript, JScript
var form, mr;
form = UserForms.SampleForm;
// Display the form as a dialog
form.ShowModal();
// Obtain the dialog result
mr = form.ModalResult;
Python
form = UserForms.SampleForm
# Display the form as a dialog
form.ShowModal()
# Obtain the dialog result
mr = form.ModalResult
VBScript
Set form = UserForms.SampleForm
' Display the form as a dialog
form.ShowModal
' Obtain the dialog result
mr = form.ModalResult
DelphiScript
var form, mr : OleVariant;
begin
form := UserForms.SampleForm;
// Display the form as a dialog
form.ShowModal;
// Obtain the dialog result
mr := form.ModalResult;
C++Script, C#Script
var form, mr;
form = UserForms["SampleForm"];
// Display the form as a dialog
form["ShowModal"]();
// Obtain the dialog result
mr = form["ModalResult"];
The ModalResult
property also lets you set the form’s result from scripts and keyword tests. Note that when you set this property to anything other than mrNone
, this causes the form to close:
JavaScript, JScript
UserForms.SampleForm.ModalResult = mrOK;
Python
form = UserForms.SampleForm
form.Left = 0
form.Top = 0
form.ShowModal()
VBScript
UserForms.SampleForm.ModalResult = mrOK
DelphiScript
UserForms.SampleForm.ModalResult := mrOK;
C++Script, C#Script
UserForms["SampleForm"]["ModalResult"] = mrOK;
Positioning Form on Screen
When you display the form for the first time during the test run, TestComplete sets the form position automatically so that it appears in the center of the screen. The next time the form is displayed, it appears in the same place where it was situated before it was closed (that is, where the user has moved the form).
If you need to display the form in a custom screen position, use the Left
and Top
properties of the UserForm
object. These properties let you determine and set the form’s position on screen as the horizontal and vertical coordinates of the form’s top-left corner.
In the following example, Left
and Top
are set to 0 in order for the form to appear in the top left corner of screen.
JavaScript, JScript
var form = UserForms.SampleForm;
form.Left = 0;
form.Top = 0;
form.ShowModal();
Python
form = UserForms.SampleForm
# Display the form as a dialog
form.ShowModal()
# Obtain the dialog result
mr = form.ModalResult
VBScript
Set form = UserForms.SampleForm
form.Left = 0
form.Top = 0
form.ShowModal
DelphiScript
var form: OleVariant;
begin
form := UserForms.SampleForm;
form.Left := 0;
form.Top := 0;
form.ShowModal;
end;
C++Script, C#Script
var form = UserForms["SampleForm"];
form["Left"] = 0;
form["Top"] = 0;
form["ShowModal"]();
Changing Form Size
When you design the form in the User Forms editor, you adjust the form size as you need. However, you may also need to change the form size dynamically, during the test execution. For example, your form can display a set of common options and a “More” button that when pressed it increases the form height and displays additional options. In this case, you have to change the form size from the script code or from the keyword test operations that use appropriate program objects.
To change the form size, use the Width
and Height
properties. They let you obtain the form height and width as well as change them.
Note: | If the AutoSize property of the user form is set to True and the form is not visible on screen, the form’s Height property returns 0, no matter what the actual height is. To obtain the form’s height in such cases, call the ShowModal method right before calling the Height property. |
The following example illustrates the described case. It requires a form named SampleForm
that contains a TcxButton
component named btnMoreLess
and another component named extra
. Pressing the btnMoreLess
button expands or shrinks the form, depending on the previous form state specified by the maximized
variable. The extra
component should be situated on the part of the form that becomes visible when the form is maximized. The SampleForm_btnMoreLess_OnClick
routine assumes to be bound to the btnMoreLess
’s OnClick
event. minWidth
and maxWidth
specify minimal and maximal height of the form respectively. You may need to specify different values for minHeight
and maxHeight
according to the required height of your form.
JavaScript, JScript
var maximized = false, // Indicates whether the form displays additional options
maxHeight = 250, // The maximal height of the form
minHeight = 150, // The minimal height of the form
dy = maxHeight - minHeight; // The height of the additional part of the form
function Main()
{
var form = UserForms.SampleForm;
// Set the initial form height
form.Height = minHeight;
// Display the form
form.ShowModal();
}
function SampleForm_btnMoreLess_OnClick(Sender)
{
var form = UserForms.SampleForm;
// Switch the state flag
maximized = !maximized;
if (maximized)
{
// Enable the extra component so that it can be selected
form.extra.Enabled = true;
// Increase the form height
form.Height += dy;
// Move the button to the bottom of the form
Sender.Top += dy;
// Change the button caption
Sender.Caption = "&Less <<";
}
else
{
// Disable the extra component so that it cannot be selected
form.extra.Enabled = false;
// Reduce the form height
form.Height -= dy;
// Move the button to the bottom of the form
Sender.Top -= dy;
// Change the button caption
Sender.Caption = "&More >>";
}
}
Python
maximized = False # Indicates whether the form displays additional options
maxHeight = 250 # The maximal height of the form
minHeight = 150 # The minimal height of the form
dy = maxHeight - minHeight # The height of the additional part of the form
def Main():
form = UserForms.SampleForm
# Set the initial form height form.Height = minHeight
# Display the form
form.ShowModal()
def SampleForm_btnMoreLess_OnClick(Sender):
form = UserForms.SampleForm
# Switch the state flag
maximized = not maximized
if maximized:
# Enable the extra component so that it can be selected
form.extra.Enabled = True
# Increase the form height
form.Height += dy
# Move the button to the bottom of the form
Sender.Top += dy
# Change the button caption
Sender.Caption = "&Less <<"
else:
# Disable the extra component so that it cannot be selected
form.extra.Enabled = False
# Reduce the form height
form.Height -= dy
# Move the button to the bottom of the form
Sender.Top -= dy
# Change the button caption
Sender.Caption = "&More >>"
VBScript
maximized = False ' Indicates whether the form displays additional options
maxHeight = 250 ' The maximal height of the form
minHeight = 150 ' The minimal height of the form
dy = maxHeight - minHeight ' The height of the additional part of the form
Sub Main
Set form = UserForms.SampleForm
' Set the initial form height
form.Height = minHeight
' Display the form
form.ShowModal
End Sub
Sub SampleForm_btnMoreLess_OnClick(Sender)
Set form = UserForms.SampleForm
' Switch the flag state
maximized = Not maximized
If maximized Then
' Enable the extra component so that it can be selected
form.extra.Enabled = True
' Increase the form height
form.Height = form.Height + dy
' Move the button to the bottom of the form
Sender.Top = Sender.Top + dy
' Change the button caption
Sender.Caption = "&Less <<"
Else
' Disable the extra component so that it cannot be selected
form.extra.Enabled = False
' Reduce the form height
form.Height = form.Height - dy
' Move the button to the bottom of the form
Sender.Top = Sender.Top - dy
' Change the button caption
Sender.Caption = "&More >>"
End If
End Sub
DelphiScript
const maximized = false; // Indicates whether the form displays additional options
const maxHeight = 250; // The maximal height of the form
const minHeight = 150; // The minimal height of the form
const dy = maxHeight - minHeight; // The height of the additional part of the form
procedure Main;
var
form : OleVariant;
begin
form := UserForms.SampleForm;
form.Height := minHeight;
form.ShowModal;
end;
procedure SampleForm_btnMoreLess_OnClick(Sender);
var
form : OleVariant;
begin
form := UserForms.SampleForm;
// Switch the state flag
maximized := not maximized;
if maximized then
begin
// Enable the extra component so that it can be selected
form.extra.Enabled := true;
// Increase the form height
form.Height := form.Height + dy;
// Move the button to the bottom of the form
Sender.Top := Sender.Top + dy;
// Change the button caption
Sender.Caption := '&Less <<';
end
else begin
// Disable the extra component so that it cannot be selected
form.extra.Enabled := false;
// Reduce the form height
form.Height := form.Height - dy;
// Move the button to the bottom of the form
Sender.Top := Sender.Top - dy;
// Change the button caption
Sender.Caption := '&More >>';
end;
end;
C++Script, C#Script
var maximized = false, // Indicates whether the form displays additional options
maxHeight = 250, // The maximal height of the form
minHeight = 150, // The minimal height of the form
dy = maxHeight - minHeight; // The height of the additional part of the form
function Main()
{
var form = UserForms["SampleForm"];
// Set the initial form height
form.Height = minHeight;
// Display the form
form["ShowModal"]();
}
function SampleForm_btnMoreLess_OnClick(Sender)
{
var form = UserForms["SampleForm"];
// Switch the state flag
maximized = !maximized;
if (maximized)
{
// Enable the extra component so that it can be selected
form["extra"]["Enabled"] = true;
// Increase the form height
form["Height"] += dy;
// Move the button to the bottom of the form
Sender["Top"] += dy;
// Change the button caption
Sender["Caption"] = "&Less <<";
}
else
{
// Disable the extra component so that it cannot be selected
form["extra"]["Enabled"] = false;
// Reduce the form height
form["Height"] -= dy;
// Move the button to the bottom of the form
Sender["Top"] -= dy;
// Change the button caption
Sender["Caption"] = "&More >>";
}
}
Sample
TestComplete includes a sample project that demonstrates how you can work with user forms:
<TestComplete Samples>\Common\User Forms
Note: | If you do not have the sample, download the TestComplete Samples installation package from the https://support.smartbear.com/testcomplete/downloads/samples/ page of our website and run it. |
See Also
User Forms
Handling Events in User Forms
UserForms Object
UserForm Object