2

Currently I am trying to implement a timer class in VBA. For that purpose I use the SetTimer and KillTimer functions of the Windows API...

This is the interface from Msdn:

  UINT_PTR WINAPI SetTimer(
  __in_opt  HWND hWnd,
  __in      UINT_PTR nIDEvent,
  __in      UINT uElapse,
  __in_opt  TIMERPROC lpTimerFunc
);

And this is the way I declared the function wihtin my VBA-Module:

Private Declare Function SetTimer Lib "user32" (ByVal Handle As Long, _
                                                ByVal TimerIDHandle As Any, _
                                                ByVal ElapseTime As Long, _
                                                ByVal AddressOfAndYourHandlerFunctionName As Long) As Long

                                                'TimerIDHandle is of Type Any so I can pass Nothing to the function

I then Call the function this way:

Dim TimerID As Long

TimerID = SetTimer(Application.hWndAccessApp, ByVal 0&, Timer.Timeout, AddressOf TimeOutHandler)

As Vba does not accept a "Null" I have tried implementing "ByVal 0&". Is this the right way to do it? Anyway...I call this function several times from the same Application and the function always returns 1 as an Identifier even though, according to Msdn, the function should return a unique ID for each timer that is created in the Window handle of the current Access Application.

Furthermore when I created only one timer the Callback function gets Called, but the Timer ID is given as 0, whereas the Settimer-Function returned a 1 at the time of initialization. Here is my Callback Function Header:

Private Sub TimeOutHandler(ByVal WindowHandle As Long, _
                           ByVal TimerMessage As Long, _ 
                           ByVal TimerID As Long, _ 
                           ByVal ElapsedTime As Long)

Where am I wrong?

Any help is greatly appreciated of course ;-)

1 Answer 1

3

It worked. If it failed then it would have returned 0. You get a 0 for TimerID in the callback because you passed a 0 for the nIDEvent argument when you created the timer. You'll need to use the value that SetTimer returned to call KillTimer(). Think of it as a timer 'handle'.

You'll never get this code working in 64-bit mode so just declare the 2nd argument as Long.

5
  • Yes, I know it worked, but if I have a running timer (IDEvent returned = 1) on the Current Access Window and want to get a second timer using the Window handle I also used fo the first timer then SetTimer still returns 1, even though it should give me a different IDEvent handle. Or can I Choose whichever IDEvent I want? This might cause trouble as I don't know which Timer IDs Access uses on its Window...By the way: I passed NULL to SetTimer, not 0 ;-) Apr 6, 2012 at 13:40
  • If you want another timer then you have to pass a different value for nIDEvent. If you use the same one (0 in your snippet) then you just get the same timer back. Apr 6, 2012 at 14:03
  • So it can be any value I want? Won't there be conflicts if Access has Timers running in its Window whose IDs I don't know? Apr 6, 2012 at 14:05
  • Yes, that's technically possible if HWND refers to a window that's owned by Access. I would guess that the Microsoft programmer did that right and used an atom instead of an integer ID to avoid this mishap. I don't know for a fact. Apr 6, 2012 at 14:10
  • Great Help...thanks! I will use the Object Pointers of my Timer-Objects to define hopefully relatively unique IDs... Apr 6, 2012 at 14:16

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.