StatusBarWait
Waits until a window's status bar contains the specified string.
StatusBarWait , BarText, Seconds, Part#, WinTitle, WinText, Interval, ExcludeTitle, ExcludeText
Parameters
- BarText
The text or partial text for the which the command will wait to appear. Default is blank (empty), which means to wait for the status bar to become blank. The text is case sensitive and the matching behavior is determined by SetTitleMatchMode, similar to WinTitle below.
To instead wait for the bar's text to change, either use StatusBarGetText in a loop, or use the RegEx example at the bottom of this page.
- Seconds
The number of seconds (can contain a decimal point or be an expression) to wait before timing out, in which case ErrorLevel will be set to 1. Default is blank, which means wait indefinitely. Specifying 0 is the same as specifying 0.5.
- Part#
Which part number of the bar to retrieve, which can be an expression. Default 1, which is usually the part that contains the text of interest.
- WinTitle
A window title or other criteria identifying the target window. See WinTitle.
- WinText
If present, this parameter must be a substring from a single text element of the target window (as revealed by the included Window Spy utility). Hidden text elements are detected if DetectHiddenText is ON.
- Interval
How often the status bar should be checked while the command is waiting (in milliseconds), which can be an expression. Default is 50.
- ExcludeTitle
Windows whose titles include this value will not be considered.
- ExcludeText
Windows whose text include this value will not be considered.
ErrorLevel
[v1.1.04+]: This command is able to throw an exception if the status bar couldn't be accessed. For more information, see Runtime Errors.
ErrorLevel is set to 1 if the command times out before a match could be found in the status bar. It is set to 2 if the status bar could not be accessed. It is set to 0 if a match is found.
Remarks
StatusBarWait attempts to read the first standard status bar on a window (class msctls_statusbar32). Some programs use their own status bars or special versions of the MS common control. Such bars are not supported.
Rather than using StatusBarGetText in a loop, it is usually more efficient to use StatusBarWait because it contains optimizations that avoid the overhead that repeated calls to StatusBarGetText would incur.
StatusBarWait determines its target window before it begins waiting for a match. If that target window is closed, the command will stop waiting even if there is another window matching the specified WinTitle and WinText.
While the command is in a waiting state, new threads can be launched via hotkey, custom menu item, or timer.
Window titles and text are case sensitive. Hidden windows are not detected unless DetectHiddenWindows has been turned on.
Related
StatusBarGetText, WinGetTitle, WinGetText, ControlGetText
Example
; The following example enters a new search pattern into an existing Explorer/Search window. IfWinExist, Search Results ; Sets the Last Found window to simplify the below. { WinActivate Send, {tab 2}!o*.txt{enter} ; In the Search window, enter the pattern to search for. Sleep, 400 ; Give the status bar time to change to "Searching". StatusBarWait, found, 30 if ErrorLevel MsgBox, The command timed out or there was a problem. else MsgBox, The search successfully completed. }
; The following example waits for the status bar of the active window to change. This example requires [v1.0.46.06+]. SetTitleMatchMode RegEx IfWinExist A ; Set the last-found window to be the active window (for use below). { StatusBarGetText, OrigText StatusBarWait, ^(?!^\Q%OrigText%\E$) ; This regular expression waits for any change to the text. }