Walkthrough: Create your first VSTO Add-in for Outlook
This walkthrough shows you how to create a VSTO Add-in for Microsoft Office Outlook. The features that you create in this kind of solution are available to the application itself, regardless of which Outlook item is open. For more information, see Office solutions development overview (VSTO).
Applies to: The information in this topic applies to VSTO Add-in projects for Outlook. For more information, see Features available by Office application and project type.
Note
Interested in developing solutions that extend the Office experience across multiple platforms? Check out the new Office Add-ins model. Office Add-ins have a small footprint compared to VSTO Add-ins and solutions, and you can build them by using almost any web programming technology, such as HTML5, JavaScript, CSS3, and XML.
This walkthrough illustrates the following tasks:
Creating an Outlook VSTO Add-in project for Outlook.
Writing code that uses the object model of Outlook to add text to the subject and body of a new mail message.
Building and running the project to test it.
Cleaning up the completed project so that the VSTO Add-in no longer runs automatically on your development computer.
Note
Your computer might show different names or locations for some of the Visual Studio user interface elements in the following instructions. The Visual Studio edition that you have and the settings that you use determine these elements. For more information, see Personalize the IDE.
Prerequisites
You need the following components to complete this walkthrough:
An edition of Visual Studio that includes the Microsoft Office developer tools. For more information, see Configure a computer to develop Office solutions.
Microsoft Outlook
Create the project
To create a new Outlook project in Visual Studio
Start Visual Studio.
On the File menu, point to New, and then click Project.
In the templates pane, expand Visual C# or Visual Basic, and then expand Office/SharePoint.
Under the expanded Office/SharePoint node, select the Office Add-ins node.
In the list of project templates, choose an Outlook VSTO Add-in project.
In the Name box, type FirstOutlookAddIn.
Click OK.
Visual Studio creates the FirstOutlookAddIn project and opens the ThisAddIn code file in the editor.
Write code that adds text to each new mail message
Next, add code to the ThisAddIn code file. The new code uses the object model of Outlook to add text to each new mail message. By default, the ThisAddIn code file contains the following generated code:
A partial definition of the
ThisAddIn
class. This class provides an entry point for your code and provides access to the object model of Outlook. For more information, see Program VSTO Add-ins. The remainder of theThisAddIn
class is defined in a hidden code file that you should not modify.The
ThisAddIn_Startup
andThisAddIn_Shutdown
event handlers. These event handlers are called when Outlook loads and unloads your VSTO Add-in. Use these event handlers to initialize your VSTO Add-in when it is loaded, and to clean up resources used by your VSTO Add-in when it is unloaded. For more information, see Events in Office projects.
To add text to the subject and body of each new mail message
In the ThisAddIn code file, declare a field named
inspectors
in theThisAddIn
class. Theinspectors
field maintains a reference to the collection of Inspector windows in the current Outlook instance. This reference prevents the garbage collector from freeing the memory that contains the event handler for the NewInspector event.Replace the
ThisAddIn_Startup
method with the following code. This code attaches an event handler to the NewInspector event.In the ThisAddIn code file, add the following code to the
ThisAddIn
class. This code defines an event handler for the NewInspector event.When the user creates a new mail message, this event handler adds text to the subject line and body of the message.
void Inspectors_NewInspector(Microsoft.Office.Interop.Outlook.Inspector Inspector) { Outlook.MailItem mailItem = Inspector.CurrentItem as Outlook.MailItem; if (mailItem != null) { if (mailItem.EntryID == null) { mailItem.Subject = "This text was added by using code"; mailItem.Body = "This text was added by using code"; } } }
To modify each new mail message, the previous code examples use the following objects:
The
Application
field of theThisAddIn
class. TheApplication
field returns an Application object, which represents the current instance of Outlook.The
Inspector
parameter of the event handler for the NewInspector event. TheInspector
parameter is an Inspector object, which represents the Inspector window of the new mail message. For more information, see Outlook solutions.
Test the project
When you build and run the project, verify that the text appears in the subject line and body of a new mail message.
To test the project
Press F5 to build and run your project.
When you build the project, the code is compiled into an assembly that is included in the build output folder for the project. Visual Studio also creates a set of registry entries that enable Outlook to discover and load the VSTO Add-in, and it configures the security settings on the development computer to enable the VSTO Add-in to run. For more information, see Office solution build process overview.
In Outlook, create a new mail message.
Verify that the following text is added to both the subject line and body of the message.
This text was added by using code.
Close Outlook.
Clean up the project
When you finish developing a project, remove the VSTO Add-in assembly, registry entries, and security settings from your development computer. Otherwise, the VSTO Add-in will run every time that you open Outlook on the development computer.
To clean up your project
- In Visual Studio, on the Build menu, click Clean Solution.
Next steps
Now that you have created a basic VSTO Add-in for Outlook, you can learn more about how to develop VSTO Add-ins from these topics:
General programming tasks that you can perform by using VSTO Add-ins for Outlook. For more information, see Program VSTO Add-ins.
Using the object model of Outlook. For more information, see Outlook solutions.
Customizing the UI of Outlook, for example, by adding a custom tab to the Ribbon or creating your own custom task pane. For more information, see Office UI customization.
Building and debugging VSTO Add-ins for Outlook. For more information, see Build Office solutions.
Deploying VSTO Add-ins for Outlook. For more information, see Deploy an Office solution.