jjohn Posted February 16, 2006 Share Posted February 16, 2006 I went thru the help of this, the example always produce the same result, I'm confused, anyone know how it works? more script sample reference? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Moderators big_daddy Posted February 16, 2006 Moderators Share Posted February 16, 2006 This is what I found:If you store you application data and you wish to save some time and memory, you can have the list ask your application for the strings to display in the list on the fly, instead of having the list store the strings explicitly. This will reduce the amount of memory your final app needs and will make filling and deleting the list contents quicker, at the expense of slightly slower display time. (If you are displaying several thousand items in the list, the time saved in filling and cleaning the list more than makes up for fractionally slower display). Furthermore, list sorting can become lightning fast.The callback mask of a list-view control is a set of bit flags that specify the item states for which the application, rather than the control, stores the current data. The callback mask applies to all of the control's items, unlike the callback item designation, which applies to a specific item. The callback mask is zero by default, meaning that the list-view control stores all item state information. After creating a list-view control and initializing its items, you can send the LVM_SETCALLBACKMASK message to change the callback mask. To retrieve the current callback mask, send the LVM_GETCALLBACKMASK message. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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