Property Set Statement
Declares, in a Class block, the name, arguments, and code that form
the body of a Property procedure that sets a reference to an object.
[Public | Private] Property Set
name([arglist,]
reference) [statements] [Exit Property]
[statements] End Property
Arguments
Public
Indicates that the Property Set procedure is accessible
to all other procedures in all scripts.
Private
Indicates that the Property Set procedure is accessible
only to other procedures in the Class block where it's declared.
name
Name of the Property Set procedure; follows standard variable naming conventions, except
that the name can be the same as a Property Get or Property Let
procedure in the same Class block.
arglist
List of variables representing arguments that are passed to the
Property Set procedure when it is called. Multiple arguments are
separated by commas. In addition, the Property Set procedure will always
have one more argument than its
corresponding Property Get procedure. That argument is the object being
assigned to the property.
reference
Variable containing the object reference used on the right side
of the object reference assignment.
statements
Any group of statements to be executed within the body of the
Property Set procedure.
Note Every Property Set statement must
define at least one argument for the procedure it defines. That argument
(or the last argument if there is more than one) contains the actual object
reference for the property when the procedure defined by the Property Set
statement is invoked. That argument is referred to as reference in the
preceding syntax.
Remarks
If not explicitly specified using either Public or Private, Property Set procedures
are public by default, that is, they are visible to all other procedures in your
script. The value of local variables in a Property Set procedure is not
preserved between calls to the procedure.
You can't define a Property Set procedure inside any other procedure
(e.g. Function or Property Let).
The Exit Property statement causes an immediate exit from a
Property Set procedure. Program execution continues with the statement
that follows the statement that called the Property Set procedure. Any
number of Exit Property statements can appear anywhere in a Property
Set procedure.
Like a Function and Property Get procedure, a Property
Set procedure is a separate procedure that can take arguments, perform a
series of statements, and change the value of its arguments. However, unlike a
Function and Property Get procedure, both of which return a value,
you can only use a Property Set procedure on the left side of an object
reference assignment (Set statement).
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