Generated when a user double-clicks an item in the tree control.

You also can use the Double Click method to obtain the tag of the last item the user double-clicked.

Event Data Fields

Name Description
Source

Source of the event. LabVIEW UI refers to any built-in user interface event.

0LabVIEW UI
Type

Type of event that occurred, such as Mouse Down, Value Change, Timeout, and so on.

Time

Value of the millisecond timer when the event occurred.

CtlRef

Reference to the control on which the event occurred.

Coords
Button

Value that corresponds to which mouse button the user clicked. Left mouse button is 1, right mouse button is 2. Operating systems might assign higher numbers if you have a mouse with more than two buttons. For filter events, you can modify the data returned by this event data field.

Mods

Cluster of Booleans that contain platform-independent modifiers. LabVIEW returns all platform-dependent modifiers in the PlatMods event data field. For key events, this event returns a Boolean indicating if the event occurred on the numeric keypad. For mouse events, this event returns a Boolean indicating if the event was a double-click. For both events, a Boolean is returned if the platform-independent menu key, such as <Ctrl> on Windows or <Command> on macOS, was pressed when the event occurred. For filter events, you can modify the data returned by this event data field.

PlatMods

Cluster of Booleans that contain platform-dependent modifiers. Specifies if platform-dependent keys, such as <Ctrl>, <Shift>, <Alt>, <Command>, and <Option> were held down when the event was triggered. For filter events, you can modify the data returned by this event data field. A key can be both a Mod and PlatMod. For example, <Ctrl> is the platform-independent menu key on Windows, but you also can use it in platform-dependent programming.

Tag

Unique tag of the item on which the event occurred.

CellPart

Value corresponding to the part of the cell the user double-clicked.

0Text—The text of any item, row header, or column header.
1Background—Area between the text and the cell borders. Because the text fills the cell, the user cannot access this part of the cell.
2Item Symbol—The symbol for an item.
3Open/Close Symbol—The symbol that appears to the left of an item when that item has child items.
4Hierarchy Lines—Horizontal and vertical lines to the left of items that outline the hierarchy of items.
5Right Border—The right border of row headers and column headers.
6Bottom Border—The bottom border of row headers and column headers.
7Bottom Right Corner—The bottom right corner of row headers and column headers.
8Unknown Part—Any location on the control that does not correspond to another part.