Is there a way to permanently disable the Themes property in FoxPro 8.0? With the themes enabled, the controls don't display properly when using program input forms.
There are ways to disable it for a certain session (Windows -> Properties Window -> change themes to false; executing command "SYS(2700,0)"; etc).
Also, it seems that including "COMMAND = _SCREEN.Themes = .F." in the config file will disable the themes every time you open FoxPro directly as an application. However, if you try to open a program through windows explorer, it doesn't seem to read the config file... the themes are enabled.
If there is no other solution, then I'll have to keep using one of these workarounds. However, it's really annoying and kills productivity when I have to either change a setting manually within FoxPro every time I use it, or else open programs through FoxPro (much slower than using the tree that's already expanded in Windows Explorer). I don't understand why the developer would not provide the ability to permanently set these properties like they do with properties in almost all applications.
Thanks in advance for any insight.
Shaun
There are ways to disable it for a certain session (Windows -> Properties Window -> change themes to false; executing command "SYS(2700,0)"; etc).
Also, it seems that including "COMMAND = _SCREEN.Themes = .F." in the config file will disable the themes every time you open FoxPro directly as an application. However, if you try to open a program through windows explorer, it doesn't seem to read the config file... the themes are enabled.
If there is no other solution, then I'll have to keep using one of these workarounds. However, it's really annoying and kills productivity when I have to either change a setting manually within FoxPro every time I use it, or else open programs through FoxPro (much slower than using the tree that's already expanded in Windows Explorer). I don't understand why the developer would not provide the ability to permanently set these properties like they do with properties in almost all applications.
Thanks in advance for any insight.
Shaun