Microsoft® Visual Basic® Scripting Edition Set Statement |
Language Reference Version 1 |
Assigns an object reference to a variable or property.
Set objectvar = {objectexpression | Nothing}The Set statement syntax has these parts:
Part Description objectvar Name of the variable or property; follows standard variable naming conventions. objectexpression Expression consisting of the name of an object, another declared variable of the same object type, or a function or method that returns an object of the same object type. Nothing Discontinues association of objectvar with any specific object. Assigning objectvar to Nothing releases all the system and memory resources associated with the previously referenced object when no other variable refers to it.
To be valid, objectvar must be an object type consistent with the object being assigned to it.The Dim, Private, Public, or ReDim statements only declare a variable that refers to an object. No actual object is referred to until you use the Set statement to assign a specific object.
Generally, when you use Set to assign an object reference to a variable, no copy of the object is created for that variable. Instead, a reference to the object is created. More than one object variable can refer to the same object. Because these variables are references to (rather than copies of) the object, any change in the object is reflected in all variables that refer to it.
Function ShowFreeSpace(drvPath) Dim fso, d, s Set fso = CreateObject("Scripting.FileSystemObject") Set d = fso.GetDrive(fso.GetDriveName(drvPath)) s = "Drive " & UCase(drvPath) & " - " s = s & d.VolumeName & "<BR>" s = s & "Free Space: " & FormatNumber(d.FreeSpace/1024, 0) s = s & " Kbytes" ShowFreeSpace = s End Function