As you can see, it first goes through the buttons (7, 8 and 9) instead of going through the textboxes. NET, however, if you start pressing the tab key, it will use the following order: 1->2->3->7>8->9->4->5->6. ![]() In this case TabIndex 0 and 10 correspond to the GroupBox Frame1 and Frame2. We still keep the same TabIndex for the components, as shown below: If you stand on the textbox Text1, and start pressing the tab key, it will go through all the controls in the following order (based on the TabIndex): 1->2->3->4->5->6->-7>8->9.Īfter the migration, we have the same form but in. Note that TabIndex 0 and 10 correspond to the Frames Frame1 and Frame2. ![]() In VB6, we have the following form: (TabIndexes in Red) ![]() While working on a migration project recently, we found a very particular behavior of the TabIndex property when migrating from Visual Basic 6.0 to.
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