You can learn a lot about Visual Basic programming by attempting the
following projects (all © Nigel Ward, April 2001). A good way to work would be
to run VB and your browser at the same time, using the task bar at the bottom of
your screen to switch between them. Alternatively, if you have a very big
monitor, you could have the VB window and the browser window open at the same
time, tiled one above the other (not side by side).
The first projects in the above list (up to the 'More Controls' project,
which is optional) are basic projects that are meant to be tackled in order.
All the necessary code is given, though most projects are intended to be
open-ended - time will be allocated for students to extend each project according to
their own initiative (suggestions will be given), writing their own code with
minimal help. Some long projects, such as the Lander project, are broken down into
parts.
The next group of projects can be done in any order - if one projects builds on another then this will be
indicated. In these projects some of the needed code may NOT be given and will
have to be created be the student.
In the last page above, called 'More', suggestions are given for many
possible projects of varying difficulty. No code is given so the entire project
must be developed by the student.
Important:
To avoid having to scroll horizontally to read long lines of code, make sure
that this browser window is maximized to fill your screen and use View>Text
Size in Internet Explorer to choose a smaller text size if necessary.
Each time you begin a new project in VB5 CCE you should choose Standard EXE
since this will create a program that can be run (executed).
Immediately after creating a new project you should save it using File>Save
Project (don't use Ctrl-S as this will save only the form file, not the
project file). It's important to make a new folder inside your personal folder
to hold each new project since each project consists of at least two files, and
sometimes more. Each project has, as a minimum:
Always give the folder, the form file and
the project file the same name. Don't move or rename a form file once it has
been saved, otherwise the project file may longer be able to find it.
When you want to open an existing project, choose the Existing tab when VB5
starts. When you want to close one project and create a new one, choose Remove
Project in the File Menu before you choose File/New Project.
Now choose a lesson from the links at the top of this page.