Twinbasic gives us a lot of imagination for a similar successor to VB6, and the company's development capabilities are so strong that if it had started 20 years ago, it would have captivated developers around the world like PYTHON did.
Maybe it will become a public company, maybe it will become a great software product like DELPHI or VSCODE.

Because the IDE does not provide these interfaces, or because some of the information is intentionally not public, we have the option of using assembly code to read some unknown memory.
Unless the IDE provides a development interface such as add in, there is also an SDK API that allows us to participate in adding functionality to the IDE.