Load Method
[Microsoft Agent is deprecated as of Windows 7, and may be unavailable in subsequent versions of Windows.]
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Description
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Loads a character into the Characters collection.
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Syntax
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agent**.Characters.Load "CharacterID",** Provider
Part Description CharacterID Required. A string value that you will use to refer to the character data to be loaded. Provider Required. A variant data type that must be one of the following: Filespec The local file location of the specified character's definition file.
URL The HTTP address for the character's definition file.
You can load characters from the Agent subdirectory by specifying a relative path (one that does not include a colon or leading slash character). This prefixes the path with Agent's characters directory (located in the localized Windows\msagent directory). For example, specifying the following would load Genie.acs from Agent's Chars directory:
Agent.Character.Load "genie", "genie.acs"
You can also specify your own directory in Agent's Chars directory.
Agent.Character.Load "genie", "MyCharacters\genie.acs"
You can load the character currently set as the current user's default character by not including a path as the second parameter of the Load method.
Agent.Character.Load "character"
You cannot load the same character (a character having the same GUID) more than once from a single instance of the control. Similarly, you cannot load the default character and other characters at the same time from a single instance of the control because the default character could be the same as the other character. If you attempt to do this, the server raises an error. However, you can create another instance of the Agent control and load the same character.
The Microsoft Agent Data Provider supports loading character data stored either as a single structured file (.ACS) with character data and animation data together or as separate character data (.ACF) and animation (.ACA) files. Use the single structured .ACS file to load a character that is stored on a local disk or network and accessed using a conventional file protocol (such as UNC pathnames). Use the separate .ACF and .ACA files when you want to load the animation files individually from a remote site where they are accessed using the HTTP protocol.
For .ACS files, using the Load method provides access to a character's animations. For .ACF files, you also use the Get method to load animation data. The Load method does not support downloading .ACS files from an HTTP site.
Loading a character does not automatically display the character. Use the Show method first to make the character visible.
If you use the Load method to load a character file stored on the local machine and the call fails; for example, because the file is not found, Agent raises an error. You can use the support in your programming language to provide an error handling routine to catch and process the error.
Sub Form_Load
On Error GoTo ErrorHandler
Agent1.Characters.Load "mychar", "genie.acs"
' Successful load
. . .
Exit Sub
ErrorHandler:
' Unsuccessful load
. . .
Resume Next
End Sub
You can also handle the error by setting RaiseRequestErrors to False, declaring a object, and assigning the Load request to it. Then follow the Load call with a statement that checks the status of the Request object.
Dim LoadRequest as Object
Sub Form_Load
Agent1.RaiseRequestErrors = False
Set LoadRequest = Agent1.Characters.Load _
("mychar", "c:\some directory\some character.acs")
If LoadRequest.Status Not 0 Then
' Unsuccessful load
. . .
Exit Sub
Else
' Successful load
. . .
End Sub
If you load a character that is not local; for example, using HTTP protocol, you can also check for a Load failure by assigning a Request object to the Load method. However, because this method of loading a character is handled asynchronously, check its status in the RequestComplete event. This technique will not work loading a character using the UNC protocol because the Load method is processed synchronously.