Article: Q140592
Product(s): Microsoft C Compiler
Version(s): winnt:2.0,2.1,2.2,4.0,5.0,6.0
Operating System(s):
Keyword(s): kbnokeyword kbActiveX kbCOMt kbCtrlCreate kbMFC kbVC150 kbVC200 kbVC400 kbVC500 kbVC600
Last Modified: 06-MAY-2001
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The information in this article applies to:
- The Microsoft Foundation Classes (MFC), used with:
- Microsoft Visual C++ for Windows, 16-bit edition, versions 1.5, 1.51, 1.52
- Microsoft Visual C++, 32-bit Editions, versions 2.0, 2.1, 2.2, 4.0
- Microsoft Visual C++, 32-bit Enterprise Edition, version 5.0
- Microsoft Visual C++, 32-bit Professional Edition, version 5.0
- Microsoft Visual C++, 32-bit Enterprise Edition, version 6.0
- Microsoft Visual C++, 32-bit Professional Edition, version 6.0
- Microsoft Visual C++, 32-bit Learning Edition, version 6.0
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SUMMARY
=======
This article illustrates how to implement per-property browsing for a custom
property present in an OLE control. The custom property can be manipulated
either in a property page that implements editing of this property or directly
in the property browser provided by the container application.
When the property browser of Microsoft Visual Basic is used, for example,
selecting the custom property for editing displays a three-dot button next to
the property's value. Clicking the three-dot button displays the property page
associated with the property--if one is available.
MORE INFORMATION
================
An OLE control container typically provides some kind of user interface where
the user can manipulate the properties of the control. Some containers may need
to browse individual property values rather than groups of property values,
which is a technique commonly referred to as per-property browsing. An OLE
control can support non-default, per-property browsing by implementing
IPerPropertyBrowsing. Otherwise, the container application uses the type
information.
When an OLE control's property is manipulated using the property browser provided
by a container application, the container queries to find out if the control
supports IPerPropertyBrowsing. If an interface pointer can be successfully
obtained, the container then makes a call to
IPerPropertyBrowsing::MapPropertyToPage to obtain the CLSID of the property page
that implements editing of this particular property. If this method returns S_OK
or S_FALSE, the container creates a property frame with the property page
corresponding to the returned CLSID in it.
The success return codes (S_OK and S_FALSE) from
IPerPropertyBrowsing::MapPropertyToPage specify whether or not a property can be
edited outside the property page identified by the CLSID. A return code of
S_FALSE implies that this particular property can only be edited through a
specific property page -- not outside this property page. For example, the
property cannot be directly edited in the property browser of Visual Basic. If
the method returns S_OK, then the property can be manipulated outside the
property page. Please refer to the CDK Books Online for more information on
MapPropertyToPage and its return values.
The sample code in this article can be added to an OLE control to implement a
custom property that can only be edited using a specific property page -- not
outside the property page. The code overrides two member functions of
COleControl, namely OnMapPropertyToPage and OnGetDisplayString. The MFC
framework calls OnMapPropertyToPage to obtain the CLSID of a property page that
implements editing of the property identified by a dispID. The framework calls
OnGetDisplayString to obtain a string representing the property's value to be
displayed in a container-supplied property browser.
Steps to Add Custom Property Named MyProp to an OLE Control
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For the code to work, the ClassWizard must have been used to add a custom
property named MyProp to an OLE control. The following steps illustrate how to
add a custom property named MyProp using ClassWizard. This will use the Get/Set
Methods implementation:
1. Load the OLE control project.
2. Open ClassWizard.
3. Click the OLE Automation tab.
4. Click Add Property.
5. In the External name box, type MyProp.
6. Under Implementation, select Get/Set Methods.
7. From the type box, select short as the property's type.
8. Type unique names for the Get and Set methods, or accept the default names,
and then click OK.
9. Click OK to confirm the choices, and close ClassWizard.
Sample Code
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Once the MyProp property is added, the following code can be used to display that
property in the property browser provided by Visual Basic:
BOOL CTestCtrl::OnMapPropertyToPage(DISPID dispid, LPCLSID
lpclsid, BOOL* pbPageOptional)
{
switch (dispid)
{
case dispidMyProp:
// Return the CLSID of the property page that implements
// editing of the MyProp property
*lpclsid = CTestPropPage::guid;
pbPageOptional = FALSE; // Can't be edited outside this page
return TRUE;
}
return COleControl::OnMapPropertyToPage(
dispid, lpclsid, pbPageOptional);
}
BOOL CTestCtrl::OnGetDisplayString(DISPID dispid, CString& strValue)
{
switch (dispid)
{
case dispidMyProp:
// Return any string that should be displayed in the property
// browser provided by VB
strValue = _T("(My Property)");
return TRUE;
}
return COleControl::OnGetDisplayString(dispid, strValue);
}
Additional query words:
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Keywords : kbnokeyword kbActiveX kbCOMt kbCtrlCreate kbMFC kbVC150 kbVC200 kbVC400 kbVC500 kbVC600 kbGrpDSMFCATL
Technology : kbAudDeveloper kbMFC
Version : winnt:2.0,2.1,2.2,4.0,5.0,6.0
Issue type : kbhowto
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