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Step 2: Adding a Control

In this step, you will add a control to your project, build it, and test it on a Web page.

Procedures

To add an object to an ATL project

  1. In Class View, right-click the Polygon project.

  2. Point to Add on the shortcut menu, and click Add Class in the submenu.

    The Add Class dialog box appears. The different object categories are listed in the tree structure on the left.

  3. Click the ATL folder.

  4. From the list of templates on the right, select ATL Control. Click Add. The ATL Control Wizard will open, and you can configure the control.

  5. Type PolyCtl as the short name and note that the other fields are automatically completed. Do not click Finish yet, because you need to make some changes.

The ATL Control Wizard's Names page contains the following fields:

Field

Contents

Short name

The name you entered for the control.

Class

The C++ class name created to implement the control.

.h file

The file created to contain the definition of the C++ class.

.cpp file

The file created to contain the implementation of the C++ class.

CoClass

The name of the component class for this control.

Interface

The name of the interface on which the control will implement its custom methods and properties.

Type

A description for the control.

ProgID

The readable name that can be used to look up the CLSID of the control.

You need to make several additional settings in the ATL Control Wizard.

To enable support for rich error information and connection points

  1. Click Options to open the Options page.

  2. Select the Connection points check box. This will create support for an outgoing interface in the IDL file.

You can also make the control insertable, which means it can be embedded into applications that support embedded objects, such as Excel or Word.

To make the control insertable

  1. Click Appearance to open the Appearance page.

  2. Select the Insertable check box, which by default will be cleared.

The polygon displayed by the object will have a solid fill color, so you need to add a Fill Color stock property.

To add a Fill Color stock property and create the control

  1. Click Stock Properties to open the Stock Properties page.

  2. Under Not supported, scroll down the list of possible stock properties. Double-click Fill Color to move it to the Supported list.

  3. This completes the options for the control. Click Finish.

As the wizard created the control, several code changes and file additions occurred. The following files were created:

File

Description

PolyCtl.h

Contains most of the implementation of the C++ class CPolyCtl.

PolyCtl.cpp

Contains the remaining parts of CPolyCtl.

PolyCtl.rgs

A text file that contains the registry script used to register the control.

PolyCtl.htm

A Web page containing a reference to the newly created control.

The wizard also performed the following code changes:

  • Added an #include statement to the stdafx.h and stdafx.cpp files to include the ATL files necessary for supporting controls.

  • Changed Polygon.idl to include details of the new control.

  • Added the new control to the object map in Polygon.cpp.

Now you can build the control to see it in action.

Building and Testing the Control

To build and test the control

  • On the Build menu, click Build Polygon.

    Once the control finishes building, right-click PolyCtl.htm in Solution Explorer and select View in Browser. The HTML Web page containing the control will be displayed. You should see a page with the title “ATL 8.0 test page for object PolyCtl” and the text PolyCtl. This is your control.

Note

When completing this tutorial, if you receive an error message where the DLL file cannot be created, close the PolyCtl.htm file and the ActiveX Control Test container and build the solution again. If you still cannot create the DLL, reboot the computer or log off (if you are using Terminal Services).

Next, you will add a custom property to the control.

Back to Step 1 | On to Step 3

See Also

Reference

ATL Tutorial: ActiveX Control in a Web Page

Change History

Date

History

Reason

January 2011

Updated for accuracy.

Customer feedback.