Partager via


How to: Add Command Routing to the Windows Forms Control

 

The new home for Visual Studio documentation is Visual Studio 2017 Documentation on docs.microsoft.com.

The latest version of this topic can be found at How to: Add Command Routing to the Windows Forms Control.

CWinFormsView](../Topic/CWinFormsView%20Class.md) routes commands and update-command UI messages to the user control to allow it to handle MFC commands (for example, frame menu items and toolbar buttons).

The user control uses ICommandTarget::Initialize to store a reference to the command source object in m_CmdSrc, as shown in the following example. To use ICommandTarget you must add a reference to mfcmifc80.dll.

CWinFormsView handles several of the common MFC view notifications by forwarding them to the managed user control. These notifications include the OnInitialUpdate, OnUpdate and OnActivateView methods of the IView Interface.

This topic assumes you have previously completed How to: Create the User Control and Host in a Dialog Box and How to: Create the User Control and Host MDI View.

To create the MFC host application

  1. Open Windows Forms Control Library you created in How to: Create the User Control and Host in a Dialog Box.

  2. Add a reference to mfcmifc80.dll, which you can do by right-clicking the project node in Solution Explorer, selecting Add, Reference, and then browsing to Microsoft Visual Studio 10.0\VC\atlmfc\lib.

  3. Open UserControl1.Designer.cs and add the following using statement:

    using Microsoft.VisualC.MFC;  
    
  4. Also, in UserControl1.Designer.cs, change this line:

    partial class UserControl1  
    

    to this:

    partial class UserControl1 : System.Windows.Forms.UserControl, ICommandTarget  
    
  5. Add this as the first line of the class definition for UserControl1:

    private ICommandSource m_CmdSrc;  
    
  6. Add the following method definitions to UserControl1 (we will create the ID of the MFC control in the next step):

    public void Initialize (ICommandSource cmdSrc)  
    {  
       m_CmdSrc = cmdSrc;  
       // need ID of control in MFC dialog and callback function   
       m_CmdSrc.AddCommandHandler(32771, new CommandHandler (singleMenuHandler));  
    }  
    
    private void singleMenuHandler (uint cmdUI)  
    {  
       // User command handler code  
       System.Windows.Forms.MessageBox.Show("Custom menu option was clicked.");  
    }  
    
  7. Open the MFC application you created in How to: Create the User Control and Host MDI View.

  8. Add a menu option that will invoke singleMenuHandler.

    Go to Resource View (Ctrl+Shift+E), expand the Menu folder, and then double-click IDR_MFC02TYPE. This displays the menu editor.

    Add a menu option at the bottom of the View menu. Notice the ID of the menu option in the Properties window. Save the file.

    In Solution Explorer, open the Resource.h file, copy the ID value for the menu option you just added, and paste that value as the first parameter to the m_CmdSrc.AddCommandHandler call in the C# project's Initialize method (replacing 32771 if necessary).

  9. Build and run the project.

    On the Build menu, click Build Solution.

    On the Debug menu, click Start without debugging.

    Select the menu option you added. Notice that the method in the .dll is called.

See Also

Hosting a Windows Forms User Control as an MFC View
ICommandSource Interface
ICommandTarget Interface
CommandHandler