Global access to objects in Office projects
When you create an Office project, Visual Studio automatically generates a class named Globals
in the project. You can use the Globals
class to access several different project items at run time from any code in the project.
Applies to: The information in this topic applies to document-level projects and VSTO Add-in projects. See Features available by Office application and project type.
How to use the Globals class
Globals
is a static class that keeps references to certain items in your project. By using the Globals
class, you can access the following items from any code in the project at run time:
The
ThisWorkbook
andSheet
n classes in an Excel workbook or template project. You can access these objects by using theGlobals.ThisWorkbook
andSheet
n properties.The
ThisDocument
class in a Word document or template project. You can access this object by using theGlobals.ThisDocument
property.The
ThisAddIn
class in a VSTO Add-in project. You can access this object by using theGlobals.ThisAddIn
property.All Ribbons in your project that you customized by using the Ribbon Designer. You can access the Ribbons by using the
Globals.Ribbons
property. For more information, see Access the Ribbon at run time.All Outlook form regions in an Outlook VSTO Add-in project. You can access the form regions by using the
Globals.FormRegions
property. For more information, see Access a form region at run time.A factory object that enables you to create Ribbon controls, and host items at run time in projects that target the .NET Framework 4 or the .NET Framework 4.5. You can access this object by using the
Globals.Factory
property. This object is an instance of a class that implements one the following interfaces:For example, you can use the
Globals.Sheet1
property to insert text into a NamedRange control onSheet1
when a user clicks a button on the actions pane in a document-level project for Excel.
Code that attempts to use the Globals
class before the document or VSTO Add-in is initialized might throw a run time exception. For example, using Globals
when declaring a class-level variable might fail because the Globals
class might not be initialized with references to all of the host items before the declared object is instantiated.
Note
The Globals
class is never initialized at design time, but control instances are created by the designer. This means that if you create a user control that uses a property of the Globals
class from inside a user control class, you must check whether the property returns null before you try to use the returned object.