OPC Studio User's Guide and Reference
DAItemDialog Class
Members  Example 



View with Navigation Tools
OpcLabs.EasyOpcForms Assembly > OpcLabs.EasyOpc.DataAccess.Forms.Browsing Namespace : DAItemDialog Class
Displays a dialog box from which the user can select an OPC Data Access item.
Object Model
DAItemDialog ClassEasyDAClientSelector ClassDANodeDescriptor ClassServerDescriptor ClassDANodeDescriptor ClassDANodeElement ClassServerDescriptor Class
Syntax
'Declaration
 
<CLSCompliantAttribute(True)>
<ComDefaultInterfaceAttribute(OpcLabs.EasyOpc.DataAccess.Forms.Browsing.ComTypes._DAItemDialog)>
<ComVisibleAttribute(True)>
<GuidAttribute("211F7E5C-0B3D-4535-AB3D-909D2046B772")>
<TypeConverterAttribute(System.ComponentModel.ExpandableObjectConverter)>
<DesignerCategoryAttribute("Component")>
Public NotInheritable Class DAItemDialog 
   Inherits DADialog
   Implements OpcLabs.BaseLib.Forms.ComTypes._FormCommonDialog, OpcLabs.BaseLib.Forms.ComTypes._SizableCommonDialog, OpcLabs.BaseLib.Licensing.ILicensingContextHolder, OpcLabs.EasyOpc.DataAccess.Forms.Browsing.ComTypes._DADialog, OpcLabs.EasyOpc.DataAccess.Forms.Browsing.ComTypes._DAItemDialog, System.ComponentModel.IComponent, System.IDisposable 
 
'Usage
 
Dim instance As DAItemDialog
Remarks

OpcDAItemDialog is a modal dialog box; therefore, when shown, it blocks the rest of the application until the user has chosen an OPC item. When a dialog box is displayed modally, no input (keyboard or mouse click) can occur except to objects on the dialog box. The program must hide or close the dialog box (usually in response to some user action) before input to the calling program can occur.

 

General

Icon:

The OPC-DA Item Dialog (DAItemDialog class) allows the user to interactively select the OPC item residing in a specific OPC server.

Use the ServerDescriptor property to specify the OPC Data Access server whose items are to be browsed, and call the ShowDialog method. If the result is equal to DialogResult.OK, the user has selected the OPC item, and information about it can be retrieved from the NodeElement property.

.NET

// This example shows how to let the user browse for an OPC Data Access item. 
//
// Find all latest examples here: https://opclabs.doc-that.com/files/onlinedocs/OPCLabs-OpcStudio/Latest/examples.html .
// OPC client and subscriber examples in C# on GitHub: https://github.com/OPCLabs/Examples-QuickOPC-CSharp .
// Missing some example? Ask us for it on our Online Forums, https://www.opclabs.com/forum/index ! You do not have to own
// a commercial license in order to use Online Forums, and we reply to every post.

using System.Windows.Forms;
using OpcLabs.EasyOpc.DataAccess.Forms.Browsing;

namespace FormsDocExamples._DAItemDialog
{
    static class ShowDialog
    {
        public static void Main1(IWin32Window owner)
        {
            var itemDialog = new DAItemDialog
            {
                ServerDescriptor = {ServerClass = "OPCLabs.KitServer.2"}
            };

            DialogResult dialogResult = itemDialog.ShowDialog(owner);
            if (dialogResult != DialogResult.OK)
                return;

            // Display results
            MessageBox.Show(owner, $"NodeElement: {itemDialog.NodeElement}");
        }
    }
}

COM

// This example shows how to let the user browse for an OPC Data Access item.
//
// Find all latest examples here: https://opclabs.doc-that.com/files/onlinedocs/OPCLabs-OpcStudio/Latest/examples.html .
// OPC client and subscriber examples in Object Pascal (Delphi) on GitHub: https://github.com/OPCLabs/Examples-QuickOPC-OP .
// Missing some example? Ask us for it on our Online Forums, https://www.opclabs.com/forum/index ! You do not have to own
// a commercial license in order to use Online Forums, and we reply to every post.

class procedure ShowDialog.Main;
var
  ItemDialog: OpcLabs_EasyOpcForms_TLB._DAItemDialog;
begin
  // Instantiate the dialog object
  ItemDialog := CoDAItemDialog.Create;

  ItemDialog.ServerDescriptor.ServerClass := 'OPCLabs.KitServer.2';

  ItemDialog.ShowDialog(nil);

  // Display results
  WriteLn(ItemDialog.NodeElement.ToString);
end;

Python

# This example shows how to let the user browse for an OPC Data Access item.
#
# Find all latest examples here: https://opclabs.doc-that.com/files/onlinedocs/OPCLabs-OpcStudio/Latest/examples.html .
# OPC client and subscriber examples in Python on GitHub: https://github.com/OPCLabs/Examples-QuickOPC-Python .
# Missing some example? Ask us for it on our Online Forums, https://www.opclabs.com/forum/index ! You do not have to own
# a commercial license in order to use Online Forums, and we reply to every post.
# The QuickOPC package is needed. Install it using "pip install opclabs_quickopc".
import opclabs_quickopc

# Import .NET namespaces.
from System.Windows.Forms import *
from OpcLabs.EasyOpc.DataAccess.Forms.Browsing import *


itemDialog = DAItemDialog()
itemDialog.ServerDescriptor.ServerClass = "OPCLabs.KitServer.2"

dialogResult = itemDialog.ShowDialog()
print(dialogResult)
if dialogResult != DialogResult.OK:
    exit()

# Display results.
print('NodeElement: ', itemDialog.NodeElement, sep='')

 

The DAItemDialog component retains the filter setting for each node between the invocations of the dialog, making it faster for the user to navigate during the subsequent invocations.

Multi-selection

When you set the MultiSelect property of the DAItemDialog to true, the dialog will allow the user to select any number of OPC-DA items. In the multi-select mode, the dialog looks similar to this:

The list below the branches and leaves (labeled “Selected nodes”) contains the set of nodes that the user has selected in the dialog. The user can freely add nodes to this list, or remove them. The selected set is carried over to next invocation of the dialog, unless you change it from the code.

In the multi-selection mode, the set of nodes selected on input (if any) is in the NodeDescriptors property. On the output, the dialog fills the information about selected nodes into the NodeElements property (and updated the NodeDescriptors property as well).

Advanced

If you want to change the parameters of the client object the component uses to perform its OPC operations, you can use the ClientSelector Property.

 

Example
// This example shows how to let the user browse for an OPC Data Access item. 
//
// Find all latest examples here: https://opclabs.doc-that.com/files/onlinedocs/OPCLabs-OpcStudio/Latest/examples.html .
// OPC client and subscriber examples in C# on GitHub: https://github.com/OPCLabs/Examples-QuickOPC-CSharp .
// Missing some example? Ask us for it on our Online Forums, https://www.opclabs.com/forum/index ! You do not have to own
// a commercial license in order to use Online Forums, and we reply to every post.

using System.Windows.Forms;
using OpcLabs.EasyOpc.DataAccess.Forms.Browsing;

namespace FormsDocExamples._DAItemDialog
{
    static class ShowDialog
    {
        public static void Main1(IWin32Window owner)
        {
            var itemDialog = new DAItemDialog
            {
                ServerDescriptor = {ServerClass = "OPCLabs.KitServer.2"}
            };

            DialogResult dialogResult = itemDialog.ShowDialog(owner);
            if (dialogResult != DialogResult.OK)
                return;

            // Display results
            MessageBox.Show(owner, $"NodeElement: {itemDialog.NodeElement}");
        }
    }
}
Inheritance Hierarchy

System.Object
   System.MarshalByRefObject
      System.ComponentModel.Component
         System.Windows.Forms.CommonDialog
            OpcLabs.BaseLib.Forms.ConcreteCommonDialog
               OpcLabs.BaseLib.Forms.FormCommonDialog
                  OpcLabs.BaseLib.Forms.SizableCommonDialog
                     OpcLabs.EasyOpc.DataAccess.Forms.Browsing.DADialog
                        OpcLabs.EasyOpc.DataAccess.Forms.Browsing.DAItemDialog

Requirements

Target Platforms: .NET Framework: Windows 10 (selected versions), Windows 11 (selected versions), Windows Server 2016, Windows Server 2022; .NET: Linux, macOS, Microsoft Windows

See Also