BorderColor Property

Microsoft Access Visual Basic

BorderColor Property

       

You can use the BorderColor property to specify the color of a control's border. Read/write Long.

expression.BorderColor

expression   Required. An expression that returns one of the objects in the Applies To list.

Setting

The BorderColor property setting is a numeric expression that corresponds to the color you want to use for a control's border.

You can use the Color Builder to set this property by clicking the Build button to the right of the property box in the property sheet. Using the Color Builder enables you to define custom border colors for controls.

You can also set this property by using Line/Border Color on the Formatting (Form/Report) toolbar, a macro, or Visual Basic.

You can set the default for this property by using a control's default control style or the DefaultControl method in Visual Basic.

Remarks

A control's border color is visible only when its SpecialEffect property is set to Flat or Shadowed. If the SpecialEffect property is set to something other than Flat or Shadowed, setting the BorderColor property changes the SpecialEffect property setting to Flat.

Example

The following example uses the RGB function to set the BorderColor, BackColor, and ForeColor properties depending on the value of the txtPastDue text box. You can also use the QBColor function to set these properties. Putting the following code in the Form_Current( ) event sets the control display characteristics as soon as the user opens a form or moves to a new record.

Sub Form_Current()
    Dim curAmntDue As Currency, lngBlack As Long
    Dim lngRed As Long, lngYellow As Long, lngWhite As Long

    If Not IsNull(Me!txtPastDue.Value) Then
        curAmntDue = Me!txtPastDue.Value
    Else
        Exit Sub
    End If
    lngRed = RGB(255, 0, 0)
    lngBlack = RGB(0, 0, 0)
    lngYellow = RGB(255, 255, 0)
    lngWhite = RGB(255, 255, 255)
    If curAmntDue > 100 Then
        Me!txtPastDue.BorderColor = lngRed
        Me!txtPastDue.ForeColor = lngRed
        Me!txtPastDue.BackColor = lngYellow
    Else
        Me!txtPastDue.BorderColor = lngBlack
        Me!txtPastDue.ForeColor = lngBlack
        Me!txtPastDue.BackColor = lngWhite
    End If
End Sub