Absolutely, Rick.
As Mrs Krabappel said to Bart's class, after showing a film about human
reproduction:
"Now that you know how to do it: Don't !"
Best wishes Harald
"Rick Rothstein" wrote in message
...
I've played with subclassing and hooking back in my compiled VB days, but
they are an absolute pain to develop from scratch... you can expect many
crashes along the way and probably unstable performance if you don't
attend to all the requisite details along the way. Of course, if you have
a reference to fully debugged code, then copy/pasting subclassing and/or
hooking code should probably be alright, but my personal preference is to
avoid subclassing and hooking unless forced into having to use them.
--
Rick (MVP - Excel)