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WizardBar passively tracks the current context of the focus in a project. It displays or attempts to display relevant information about the location in which you are currently working in a project.
When you work in a source editor window, WizardBar displays the class or member function in which the cursor is placed. In the source editor, a function effectively begins at the home location (left hand side) of the line on which its definition or declaration begins, and ends with the } end bracket. When the cursor is "between" functions, that is, after an end bracket but before the next function is defined, WizardBar displays the previous function name in a shaded font.
WizardBar also tracks the current context when you work in the dialog editor. WizardBar tracks the class of the selected dialog, or the control ID of the selected control, depending on which is currently active. Double-clicking a dialog control does one of the following:
In other editors, WizardBar does not track, but retains its most recent context displayed in a shaded font.
WizardBar also adjusts its Action menu to include only tasks that make sense within the current context. The Action button has two states: active and inactive. In the active state the button is lit with a yellow document under the wand, to show that the WizardBar can perform some meaningful action. In the inactive state the document disappears, indicating that the WizardBar cannot currently perform a valid action.
The default action, invoked by clicking the Action button, also depends on the current context. It can be "go to function definition," "go to function declaration," or "create new class," depending on the focus. You execute the default action by: