Results for "Author: kevin slaughter"
Allows your user to create simple ~ complex pure API menus, with scripting and an unlimited amount of sub-levels. This was actually created for a shell replacement project of mine, to allow simple and customizeable menu objects for my users.
Since your desktop is one big ListView, this sits in the systray and allows you to easily change the viewmode of your desktop icons. DM uses an INI to store your last preferance, and will reset the viewmode to normal when you exit. VB form menus are now no longer used, and have been replaced with API menus that are created dynamically on each request, so they don't stay in memory (what little bit it would use anyway).
Allows your user to create simple ~ complex pure API menus, with scripting and an unlimited amount of sub-levels. This was actually created for a shell replacement project of mine, to allow simple and customizeable menu objects for my users.
Since your desktop is one big ListView, this sits in the systray and allows you to easily change the viewmode of your desktop icons. DM uses an INI to store your last preferance, and will reset the viewmode to normal when you exit. VB form menus are now no longer used, and have been replaced with API menus that are created dynamically on each request, so they don't stay in memory (what little bit it would use anyway).
Allows your user to create simple ~ complex pure API menus, with scripting and an unlimited amount of sub-levels. This was actually created for a shell replacement project of mine, to allow simple and customizeable menu objects for my users.
Since your desktop is one big ListView, this sits in the systray and allows you to easily change the viewmode of your desktop icons. DM uses an INI to store your last preferance, and will reset the viewmode to normal when you exit. VB form menus are now no longer used, and have been replaced with API menus that are created dynamically on each request, so they don't stay in memory (what little bit it would use anyway).
Allows your user to create simple ~ complex pure API menus, with scripting and an unlimited amount of sub-levels. This was actually created for a shell replacement project of mine, to allow simple and customizeable menu objects for my users.
Since your desktop is one big ListView, this sits in the systray and allows you to easily change the viewmode of your desktop icons. DM uses an INI to store your last preferance, and will reset the viewmode to normal when you exit. VB form menus are now no longer used, and have been replaced with API menus that are created dynamically on each request, so they don't stay in memory (what little bit it would use anyway).
Allows your user to create simple ~ complex pure API menus, with scripting and an unlimited amount of sub-levels. This was actually created for a shell replacement project of mine, to allow simple and customizeable menu objects for my users.
Since your desktop is one big ListView, this sits in the systray and allows you to easily change the viewmode of your desktop icons. DM uses an INI to store your last preferance, and will reset the viewmode to normal when you exit. VB form menus are now no longer used, and have been replaced with API menus that are created dynamically on each request, so they don't stay in memory (what little bit it would use anyway).
Allows your user to create simple ~ complex pure API menus, with scripting and an unlimited amount of sub-levels. This was actually created for a shell replacement project of mine, to allow simple and customizeable menu objects for my users.
Since your desktop is one big ListView, this sits in the systray and allows you to easily change the viewmode of your desktop icons. DM uses an INI to store your last preferance, and will reset the viewmode to normal when you exit. VB form menus are now no longer used, and have been replaced with API menus that are created dynamically on each request, so they don't stay in memory (what little bit it would use anyway).
Allows your user to create simple ~ complex pure API menus, with scripting and an unlimited amount of sub-levels. This was actually created for a shell replacement project of mine, to allow simple and customizeable menu objects for my users.
Since your desktop is one big ListView, this sits in the systray and allows you to easily change the viewmode of your desktop icons. DM uses an INI to store your last preferance, and will reset the viewmode to normal when you exit. VB form menus are now no longer used, and have been replaced with API menus that are created dynamically on each request, so they don't stay in memory (what little bit it would use anyway).
Allows your user to create simple ~ complex pure API menus, with scripting and an unlimited amount of sub-levels. This was actually created for a shell replacement project of mine, to allow simple and customizeable menu objects for my users.
Since your desktop is one big ListView, this sits in the systray and allows you to easily change the viewmode of your desktop icons. DM uses an INI to store your last preferance, and will reset the viewmode to normal when you exit. VB form menus are now no longer used, and have been replaced with API menus that are created dynamically on each request, so they don't stay in memory (what little bit it would use anyway).
Allows your user to create simple ~ complex pure API menus, with scripting and an unlimited amount of sub-levels. This was actually created for a shell replacement project of mine, to allow simple and customizeable menu objects for my users.
Since your desktop is one big ListView, this sits in the systray and allows you to easily change the viewmode of your desktop icons. DM uses an INI to store your last preferance, and will reset the viewmode to normal when you exit. VB form menus are now no longer used, and have been replaced with API menus that are created dynamically on each request, so they don't stay in memory (what little bit it would use anyway).
Allows your user to create simple ~ complex pure API menus, with scripting and an unlimited amount of sub-levels. This was actually created for a shell replacement project of mine, to allow simple and customizeable menu objects for my users.
Since your desktop is one big ListView, this sits in the systray and allows you to easily change the viewmode of your desktop icons. DM uses an INI to store your last preferance, and will reset the viewmode to normal when you exit. VB form menus are now no longer used, and have been replaced with API menus that are created dynamically on each request, so they don't stay in memory (what little bit it would use anyway).