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BarCodeWiz Barcode ActiveX Control
User Manual

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What Is BarCodeWiz ActiveX
Installation
Upgrading from Previous Version
Quick Start
Overview
Using in MS Access
Using in MS Excel
Using in MS Word
Using in MS Word - Mail Merge
Using in MS Visual Basic
Using in MS Visual C++
Bar Code Types (Symbologies)
Overview
Code 39 and Code 39 Extended
Code 128 A, B, C, and Auto
UCC / EAN 128
Interleaved 2 of 5
Standard 2 of 5
Code 93
Code 11
Codabar
UPC A
UPC E
EAN 13
EAN 8
PostNet
RoyalMail
Reference
Properties
AutoSize
BackColor
BackStyle
Barcode
BarcodeHeight
BarcodeTextFont
BarcodeTextPosition
BearerBars
Border
BottomText
BottomTextAlign
BottomTextFont
ForeColor
NarrowBarWidth
OptionalCheckChar
Orientation
Picture
QuietZone
ScaleMode
StretchBarcodeText
Symbology
TopText
TopTextAlign
TopTextFont
WideToNarrowRatio
Methods
CopyToClipboard
CopyToClipboardAsWMF
SaveAs
ShowProperties
Verify
Events
Click
DblClick
MouseDown
MouseMove
MouseUp
License
BarCodeWiz ActiveX License
Support
MouseMove
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MouseMove event occurs when the user moves the mouse.

Syntax

BarCodeWiz1_MouseMove(ByVal Button As Long, ByVal Shift As Long, ByVal x As Long, ByVal y As Long)

The MouseMove event syntax has these parts:
 
Part
Description
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Button
Returns an integer that identifies the state of mouse buttons. The button argument is a bit field with bits corresponding to the left button (bit 0), right button (bit 1), and middle button (bit 2). These bits correspond to the values 1, 2, and 4, respectively. For example, if both left and right mouse buttons were pressed, the value of Button would be 1 + 2 = 3.
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Shift
Returns an integer that corresponds to the state of the SHIFT, CTRL, and ALT keys while the event occurs. A bit is set if the key is down. The shift argument is a bit field with the least-significant bits corresponding to the SHIFT key (bit 0), the CTRL key (bit 1), and the ALT key (bit 2 ). These bits correspond to the values 1, 2, and 4, respectively. The shift argument indicates the state of these keys. Some, all, or none of the bits can be set, indicating that some, all, or none of the keys are pressed. For example, if both CTRL and ALT were pressed, the value of shift would be 6.
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x, y
Returns the current location of the mouse pointer, in pixels.
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