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Daniel February 22nd 07 06:58 PM

ribbonx and with c++
 
Hello all. I'm currently updating an older Outlook addin we have. It's
written in C++ with visual Studio 2003. We're trying to put our addin
buttons on the ribbon on appointment items. I found the excellent article
written by Eric Faller, "Using Ribbonx with C++ and atl"
(http://blogs.msdn.com/jensenh/archiv...c-and-atl.aspx)
and have managed to get the ribbon button to appear.

The callbacks are a little trickier though is getting the call back for the
button right. Mr. Faller implements all the callback functions on the same
class that implements "OnConnection()". That class is not the one in which
I've implemented my inspector wrapper for appointments. How would I be able
to have the callbacks occurr not on the connection class but on another
class. And how would this effect multiple open appointments?



Dmitry Streblechenko February 22nd 07 08:33 PM

ribbonx and with c++
 
You cannot have the call occur on some other object (how would Outlook know
which one?), but you can definitely find out which inspector the call comes
from by reading the RibbonControl.Context property - RibbonControl will be
passed to your event handler, and Context property is the Inspector object.

Dmitry Streblechenko (MVP)
http://www.dimastr.com/
OutlookSpy - Outlook, CDO
and MAPI Developer Tool

"Daniel" wrote in message
...
Hello all. I'm currently updating an older Outlook addin we have. It's
written in C++ with visual Studio 2003. We're trying to put our addin
buttons on the ribbon on appointment items. I found the excellent article
written by Eric Faller, "Using Ribbonx with C++ and atl"
(http://blogs.msdn.com/jensenh/archiv...c-and-atl.aspx)
and have managed to get the ribbon button to appear.

The callbacks are a little trickier though is getting the call back for
the button right. Mr. Faller implements all the callback functions on the
same class that implements "OnConnection()". That class is not the one in
which I've implemented my inspector wrapper for appointments. How would I
be able to have the callbacks occurr not on the connection class but on
another class. And how would this effect multiple open appointments?




Dan G February 23rd 07 02:11 PM

ribbonx and with c++
 
Thank you. I think that was the hint I needed.

"Dmitry Streblechenko" wrote:

You cannot have the call occur on some other object (how would Outlook know
which one?), but you can definitely find out which inspector the call comes
from by reading the RibbonControl.Context property - RibbonControl will be
passed to your event handler, and Context property is the Inspector object.

Dmitry Streblechenko (MVP)
http://www.dimastr.com/
OutlookSpy - Outlook, CDO
and MAPI Developer Tool

"Daniel" wrote in message
...
Hello all. I'm currently updating an older Outlook addin we have. It's
written in C++ with visual Studio 2003. We're trying to put our addin
buttons on the ribbon on appointment items. I found the excellent article
written by Eric Faller, "Using Ribbonx with C++ and atl"
(http://blogs.msdn.com/jensenh/archiv...c-and-atl.aspx)
and have managed to get the ribbon button to appear.

The callbacks are a little trickier though is getting the call back for
the button right. Mr. Faller implements all the callback functions on the
same class that implements "OnConnection()". That class is not the one in
which I've implemented my inspector wrapper for appointments. How would I
be able to have the callbacks occurr not on the connection class but on
another class. And how would this effect multiple open appointments?






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