When you automate an application such as a Microsoft Office
application, the calls to the properties and methods of the Office
application's objects must be connected in some way to those objects. The
process of connecting property and method calls to the objects that implement
those properties and methods is commonly called
binding. In Visual C#, the two types of binding that are available are
early binding and
late binding. The type of binding you choose can affect many aspects of your
program, including performance, flexibility, and maintainability.
This article explains and compares early and late binding for Visual C#
Automation clients and provides code samples that demonstrate both types of
binding.
Early binding
With early binding, Visual C# uses type information that is
available about the Office Application in question to bind directly to the
methods or properties it needs to use. The compiler can perform type and syntax
checks to ensure that the correct number and type of parameters are passed to
the method or property, and that the returned value will be of the expected
type. Because less work is required at run time to make a call to a property or
method, early binding is sometimes faster; however, although early binding may
be faster, performance differences when compared to late binding are often
negligible.
Early binding does have the minor disadvantage that it
can introduce possible version compatibility issues. For example, suppose that
an Automation server such as Microsoft Excel 2002 introduces a new method or
property that was unavailable in Excel 2000, or makes a change to an existing
property or method. These changes may alter the binary layout of the object and
cause problems with a Visual C# application that uses the Excel 2002 type
information to automate Excel 2000. To avoid this problem with early binding,
it is generally recommended that you use the type information for the earliest
version of the Office Application that you wish to support when you develop and
test your Automation client.
The following steps demonstrate how to
build an Automation client that uses early binding. Note that, as the steps
illustrate, early binding requires you to reference the type library for the
Automation client.
Create an Automation client that uses early binding
- Start Microsoft Visual Studio .NET. On the File menu, click New and then click Project. Select Windows Application from the Visual C# Projects types. Form1 is created by
default.
- Add a reference to the Microsoft Excel Object Library. To do this, follow these steps:
- On the Project menu, click Add Reference.
- On the COM tab, locate theMicrosoft Excel Object Library and click Select.
Note Office 2003 includes Primary Interop Assemblies (PIAs). Office XP
does not include PIAs, but they can be downloaded.
For additional information about Office XP PIAs, click the
following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base: 328912
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/328912/
)
Microsoft Office XP primary interop assemblies (PIAs) are available for download
- Click OK in the Add References dialog box to accept your selections. If you receive a prompt to
generate wrappers for the libraries that you selected, click Yes.
- On the View menu, select Toolbox to display the Toolbox, and add a button to Form1.
- Double-click Button1. The code window for the Form appears.
- In the code window, replace the following code
private void button1_Click(object sender, System.EventArgs e)
{
}
with:
private void button1_Click(object sender, System.EventArgs e)
{
Excel.Application objApp;
Excel._Workbook objBook;
Excel.Workbooks objBooks;
Excel.Sheets objSheets;
Excel._Worksheet objSheet;
Excel.Range range;
try
{
// Instantiate Excel and start a new workbook.
objApp = new Excel.Application();
objBooks = objApp.Workbooks;
objBook = objBooks.Add( Missing.Value );
objSheets = objBook.Worksheets;
objSheet = (Excel._Worksheet)objSheets.get_Item(1);
range = objSheet.get_Range("A1", Missing.Value);
range.set_Value(Missing.Value, "Hello, World!" );
//Return control of Excel to the user.
objApp.Visible = true;
objApp.UserControl = true;
}
catch( Exception theException )
{
String errorMessage;
errorMessage = "Error: ";
errorMessage = String.Concat( errorMessage, theException.Message );
errorMessage = String.Concat( errorMessage, " Line: " );
errorMessage = String.Concat( errorMessage, theException.Source );
MessageBox.Show( errorMessage, "Error" );
}
}
- Scroll to the top of the code window. Add the following
line to the end of the list of using directives:
using System.Reflection;
using Excel = Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel;
Late binding
In contrast to early binding, late binding waits until run time
to bind property and method calls to their objects. To do this, the target
object must implement a special COM interface:
IDispatch. The
IDispatch::GetIDsOfNames method allows Visual C# to interrogate an object about what
methods and properties it supports and the
IDispatch::Invoke method then allows Visual C# to call those methods and
properties. Late binding in this fashion has the advantage of removing some of
the version dependencies that are inherent with early binding. However, it has
the disadvantages of removing compile-time checks on the integrity of
automation code, as well as not providing Intellisense features that can
provide clues to correct calls to methods and properties.
To use late
binding in Visual C#, use the
System.Type.InvokeMember method. This method calls
IDispatch::GetIDsOfNames and
IDispatch::Invoke to bind to the Automation server's methods and
properties.
Create an Automation client that uses late binding
- Start Microsoft Visual Studio .NET. On the File menu, click New and then click Project. Select Windows Application from the Visual C# Projects types. Form1 is created by
default.
- On the View menu, select Toolbox to display the Toolbox, and add a button to Form1.
- Double-click Button1. The code window for the Form appears.
- In the code window, replace the following code
private void button1_Click(object sender, System.EventArgs e)
{
}
with:
private void button1_Click(object sender, System.EventArgs e)
{
object objApp_Late;
object objBook_Late;
object objBooks_Late;
object objSheets_Late;
object objSheet_Late;
object objRange_Late;
object[] Parameters;
try
{
// Get the class type and instantiate Excel.
Type objClassType;
objClassType = Type.GetTypeFromProgID("Excel.Application");
objApp_Late = Activator.CreateInstance(objClassType);
//Get the workbooks collection.
objBooks_Late = objApp_Late.GetType().InvokeMember( "Workbooks",
BindingFlags.GetProperty, null, objApp_Late, null );
//Add a new workbook.
objBook_Late = objBooks_Late.GetType().InvokeMember( "Add",
BindingFlags.InvokeMethod, null, objBooks_Late, null );
//Get the worksheets collection.
objSheets_Late = objBook_Late.GetType().InvokeMember( "Worksheets",
BindingFlags.GetProperty, null, objBook_Late, null );
//Get the first worksheet.
Parameters = new Object[1];
Parameters[0] = 1;
objSheet_Late = objSheets_Late.GetType().InvokeMember( "Item",
BindingFlags.GetProperty, null, objSheets_Late, Parameters );
//Get a range object that contains cell A1.
Parameters = new Object[2];
Parameters[0] = "A1";
Parameters[1] = Missing.Value;
objRange_Late = objSheet_Late.GetType().InvokeMember( "Range",
BindingFlags.GetProperty, null, objSheet_Late, Parameters );
//Write "Hello, World!" in cell A1.
Parameters = new Object[1];
Parameters[0] = "Hello, World!";
objRange_Late.GetType().InvokeMember( "Value", BindingFlags.SetProperty,
null, objRange_Late, Parameters );
//Return control of Excel to the user.
Parameters = new Object[1];
Parameters[0] = true;
objApp_Late.GetType().InvokeMember( "Visible", BindingFlags.SetProperty,
null, objApp_Late, Parameters );
objApp_Late.GetType().InvokeMember( "UserControl", BindingFlags.SetProperty,
null, objApp_Late, Parameters );
}
catch( Exception theException )
{
String errorMessage;
errorMessage = "Error: ";
errorMessage = String.Concat( errorMessage, theException.Message );
errorMessage = String.Concat( errorMessage, " Line: " );
errorMessage = String.Concat( errorMessage, theException.Source );
MessageBox.Show( errorMessage, "Error" );
}
}
- Scroll to the top of the code window. Add the following
line to the end of the list of using directives:
For more information, visit the following Microsoft
Developer Network (MSDN) Web site:
For
additional information about binding, click the following article numbers to
view the articles in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
245115
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/245115/
)
Using early binding and late binding in Automation
244167
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/244167/
)
Writing Automation clients for multiple Office versions
247579
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/247579/
)
Use DISPID binding to automate Office applications whenever possible
Article ID: 302902 - Last Review: March 27, 2007 - Revision: 7.4
APPLIES TO
- Microsoft Visual C# .NET 2003 Standard Edition
- Microsoft Visual C# .NET 2002 Standard Edition
- Microsoft Office Access 2003
- Microsoft Access 2002 Standard Edition
- Microsoft Office Excel 2003
- Microsoft Excel 2002 Standard Edition
- Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2003
- Microsoft PowerPoint 2002 Standard Edition
- Microsoft Office Word 2003
- Microsoft Word 2002
| kbpia kbautomation kbhowtomaster KB302902 |