SendKeys {Enter} acts like Return rather than Enter
just to qualify - at least looking at the help for each would lead one to
believe what is sent is different in application.Sendkeys. I don't have a
way to test the difference - but you can try it and see if it makes a
difference.
--
Regards,
Tom Ogilvy
"Tom Ogilvy" wrote in message
...
In application.sendkeys rather than sendkeys you can specify the
difference:
ENTER (numeric keypad) {ENTER}
ENTER ~ (tilde)
Go to the VBE, in a module, type
application.sendkeys
highlight the complete phrase and hit F1.
I guess you would want
Application.Sendkeys "{ENTER}",True
Regards,
Tom Ogilvy
"Robert Chapman" wrote in message
...
-----Original Message-----
I guess I am missing the distinction between Return and
Enter. On my
keyboard, I have no return key.
Most keyboards have return on the right of the main
keyboard area, to the above left of the cursor keys. The
Enter key is the key at the extreme bottom right, to the
right of the number keypad.
On older keyboards, I believe the enter key
may have been called Return. I have always thought of
them as synonymous.
There is a small difference. Enter always acts like
return but enter often does something more than return and
in some programs, particularly primitive ones, you have to
use the enter key *instead* of return.
QMF is a mainframe product isn't it - IBM 3270 type
stuff. Perhaps it has
to do with your keyboard emulation.
Maybe but no-one in IT here seems to know unfortunately.
Rob
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