Difference between revisions of "A 'hello world' CS program"

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# Update the target [[rxCustomUI]] state, which we have done above
 
# Update the target [[rxCustomUI]] state, which we have done above
 
# Render the updated UI, which we are doing here
 
# Render the updated UI, which we are doing here
 +
 +
 +
== Remarks ==
 +
* [[rxCustomUI]] contexts are identified by their unique context ids (e.g. 'my_test_cs_ctx' above). When an rxCustomUI is [[Method create|created]] with a ''contextId'' that doesn't correspond to an existing context, the context gets created. Otherwise the [[rxCustomUI]] joins the context and shares its state with other [[rxCustomUI]]s in it.
 +
* You can use ''rxCustomUI.clear'' to clear a context's state
 +
 +
 +
== Making our code more compact ==
 +
The Dynamic RibbonX API is composable, which we can take advantage to make our code more compact:
 +
 +
namespace DynamicRibbonXAddin
 +
{
 +
    class MyCustomUI2
 +
    {
 +
        private rxCustomUI _customUI;
 +
 +
        public MyCustomUI2()
 +
        {
 +
            // Instantiate a new rxCustomUI in a new context with id 'my_test_cs_ctx'
 +
            _customUI = rxCustomUI.create("my_test_cs_ctx", "Test C# Context");
 +
 +
            // Add a new tab and label it
 +
            _customUI.ribbon.tabs.add(new rxTab
 +
            {
 +
                label = "My First Tab"
 +
            });
 +
 +
            // Render the UI
 +
            _customUI.refresh();
 +
        }
 +
    }
 +
}
 +
</syntaxhighlight>

Revision as of 12:59, 15 March 2013

Creating a tab

  • Add a new class to your project and name it MyCustomUI.
  • Add the following code to your class
  1. // Namespaces of the two Dynamic RibbonX assemblies 
  2. using LogismiX.Interop.DynamicRibbonX;
  3. using LogismiX.DynamicRibbonX.Core;
  4.  
  5. namespace DynamicRibbonXAddin
  6. {
  7.  
  8.     class MyCustomUI
  9.     {
  10.         private rxCustomUI _customUI;
  11.  
  12.         public MyCustomUI()
  13.         {
  14.             // Instantiate a new rxCustomUI in a new context with id 'my_test_cs_ctx'
  15.             _customUI = rxCustomUI.create("my_test_cs_ctx", "Test C# Context");
  16.  
  17.             // Cache a reference to the custom UI's ribbon
  18.             rxRibbon myRibbon = _customUI.ribbon;
  19.  
  20.             // Create a new tab and label it 'My Tab'
  21.             rxTab myTab = new rxTab();
  22.             myTab.label = "My First Tab";
  23.  
  24.             // Add the tab to myRibbon's tabs
  25.             myRibbon.tabs.add(myTab);
  26.  
  27.             // Render the UI
  28.             _customUI.refresh();
  29.         }
  30.  
  31.     }
  32. }
  • Modify class ThisAddin in ThisAddin.cs as follows
  1. namespace DynamicRibbonXAddin
  2. {
  3.     public partial class ThisAddIn
  4.     {
  5.         private MyCustomUI _myCustomUI;
  6.  
  7.         private void ThisAddIn_Startup(object sender, System.EventArgs e)
  8.         {
  9.             // Show the custom ribbon
  10.             _myCustomUI = new MyCustomUI();
  11.         }
  12.  
  13.         private void ThisAddIn_Shutdown(object sender, System.EventArgs e)
  14.         {
  15.         }
  16.     }
  17. }
  • Run the add-in. If everything went according to plan a new tab labeled 'My First Tab' will appear when the application starts
    EmptyTab.png

Code Analysis

  1. // Instantiate a new rxCustomUI in a new context with id 'my_test_cs_ctx'
  2. _customUI = rxCustomUI.create("my_test_cs_ctx", "Test C# Context");

rxCustomUI is at the top of the object model hierarchy. Here we instantiate a new rxCustomUI object in a new context with id 'my_text_cs_ctx' with description 'Test C# Context'


  1. // Cache a reference to the custom UI's ribbon
  2. rxRibbon myRibbon = _customUI.ribbon;

Each rxCustomUI object owns a unique rxRibbon object. Here, we are caching a reference to the rxRibbon object of _customUI


  1. // Create a new tab and label it 'My Tab'
  2. rxTab myTab = new rxTab();
  3. myTab.label = "My First Tab";

Here, we create a new rxTab object and give it a label


  1. // Add the tab to myRibbon's tabs
  2. myRibbon.tabs.add(myTab);

Each rxRibbon object has a collection of rxTab objects (accessible through its tabs property). Here we add the tab we created above to our ribbon's tabs

  1. // Render the UI
  2. _customUI.refresh();

To ensure optimal performance, UI updates always take place in two steps:

  1. Update the target rxCustomUI state, which we have done above
  2. Render the updated UI, which we are doing here


Remarks

  • rxCustomUI contexts are identified by their unique context ids (e.g. 'my_test_cs_ctx' above). When an rxCustomUI is created with a contextId that doesn't correspond to an existing context, the context gets created. Otherwise the rxCustomUI joins the context and shares its state with other rxCustomUIs in it.
  • You can use rxCustomUI.clear to clear a context's state


Making our code more compact

The Dynamic RibbonX API is composable, which we can take advantage to make our code more compact:

namespace DynamicRibbonXAddin {

   class MyCustomUI2
   {
       private rxCustomUI _customUI;
       public MyCustomUI2()
       {
           // Instantiate a new rxCustomUI in a new context with id 'my_test_cs_ctx'
           _customUI = rxCustomUI.create("my_test_cs_ctx", "Test C# Context");
           // Add a new tab and label it
           _customUI.ribbon.tabs.add(new rxTab
           {
               label = "My First Tab"
           });
           // Render the UI
           _customUI.refresh();
       }
   }

} </syntaxhighlight>