Provides access to Visual Basic safe arrays.
varName = new VBArray(safeArray) |
Arguments
- varName
-
Required. The variable name to which the VBArray is assigned.
- safeArray
-
Required. A VBArray value.
Remarks
VBArrays are read-only, and cannot be created directly. The safeArray argument must have obtained a VBArray value before being passed to the VBArray constructor. This can only be done by retrieving the value from an existing ActiveX or other object.
VBArrays can have multiple dimensions. The indices of each dimension can be different. The dimensions method retrieves the number of dimensions in the array; the lbound and ubound methods retrieve the range of indices used by each dimension.
Example
The following example consists of three parts. The first part is VBScript code to create a Visual Basic safe array. The second part is JScript code that converts the Visual Basic safe array to a JScript array. Both of these parts go into the <HEAD> section of an HTML page. The third part is the JScript code that goes in the <BODY> section to run the other two parts.
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<HEAD> <SCRIPT LANGUAGE="VBScript"> <!-- Function CreateVBArray() Dim i, j, k Dim a(2, 2) k = 1 For i = 0 To 2 For j = 0 To 2 a(j, i) = k document.writeln(k) k = k + 1 Next document.writeln("vbCRLF") Next CreateVBArray = a End Function --> </SCRIPT> <SCRIPT LANGUAGE="JScript"> <!-- function VBArrayTest(vbarray){ var a = new VBArray(vbarray); var b = a.toArray(); var i; for (i = 0; i < 9; i++) { document.writeln(b[i]); } } --> </SCRIPT> </HEAD> <BODY> <SCRIPT LANGUAGE="JScript"> <!-- VBArrayTest(CreateVBArray()); --> </SCRIPT> </BODY> |
Properties
The VBArray object has no properties.