ProfileInt

Description

Obtains the integer value of a setting in the profile file for your application.

Syntax

ProfileInt ( filename, section, key, default )

Argument

Description

filename

A string whose value is the name of the profile file. If you do not specify a full path, ProfileInt uses the operating system’s standard file search order to find the file.

section

A string whose value is the name of a group of related values in the profile file. In the file, section names are in square brackets. Do not include the brackets in section. Section is not case sensitive.

key

A string specifying the setting name in section whose value you want. The setting name is followed by an equal sign in the file. Do not include the equal sign in key. Key is not case sensitive.

default

An integer value that ProfileInt will return if filename is not found, if section or key does not exist in filename, or if the value of key cannot be converted to an integer.

Returns

Integer. Returns default if filename is not found, section is not found in filename, or key is not found in section, or the value of key is not an integer. Returns -1 if an error occurs. If any argument’s value is null, ProfileInt returns null.

Usage

Use ProfileInt or ProfileString to get configuration settings from a profile file that you have designed for your application.

You can use SetProfileString to change values in the profile file to customize your application’s configuration at runtime. Before you make changes, you can use ProfileInt and ProfileString to obtain the original settings so you can restore them when the user exits the application.

ProfileInt, ProfileString, and SetProfileString can read or write to files with ANSI or UTF16-LE encoding on Windows systems, and ANSI or UTF16-BE encoding on UNIX systems.

NoteWindows registry ProfileInt can also be used to obtain configuration settings from the Windows system registry. For information on how to use the system registry, see the discussion of initialization files and the Windows registry in Application Techniques.

Examples

Example 1

These examples use a file called PROFILE.INI, which contains the following:

[Pb]

Maximized=1

[security]

Class=7

Example 2

This statement returns the integer value for the keyword Maximized in section PB of file PROFILE.INI. If there were no PB section or no Maximized keyword in the PB section, it would return 3:

ProfileInt("C:\PROFILE.INI", "PB", "maximized", 3)

Example 3

The following statements display a MessageBox if the integer value for the Class setting in section Security of file C:\PROFILE.INI is less than 10. The default security setting is 6 if the profile file is not found or does not contain a Class setting:

IF ProfileInt("C:\PROFILE.INI", "Security", &

   "Class", 6) < 10 THEN

   // Class is < 10

   MessageBox("Warning", "Access Denied")

ELSE

 ... // Some processing

END IF

See also