Using delegates in CS
From Ribbon Commander Documentation
Revision as of 16:28, 15 March 2013 by Rxdff15551 bb53 (Talk | contribs)
Prerequisites
We recommend you go through A 'hello world' C# program before going into this example.
Background
You can subscribe to events of Dynamic RibbonX controls by using .NET events or .NET delegates. Here, we show how it can be done by using .NET delegates.
- Every Dynamic RibbonX control has an associated *Delegates class in namespace LogismiX.DynamicRibbonX.Core which exposes all delegate signatures used by the control for its callbacks.
- Visual Studio 2012 allows you to automatically insert delegate stubs based on their signature instead of typing the code (and double-checking their signature) manually. For earlier versions of Visual Studio, we recommend you use events whose stubs can be inserted automatically instead, where possible.
Example
In this example we will set up a UI that contains an rxEditBox control and subscribe to all its delegates.