ACDUAL Sample: Adds Dual Interfaces to an Automation Application (C++ Samples)

ACDUAL demonstrates how to add dual-interface support to an MFC-based Automation application with the native compiler COM support. See the MFC ACDUAL sample for more information.

Security noteSecurity Note

This sample code is intended to illustrate a concept, and it shows only the code that is relevant to that concept. It may not meet the security requirements for a specific environment, and it should not be used exactly as shown. We recommend that you add security and error-handling code to make your projects more secure and robust. Microsoft provides this sample code "AS IS" with no warranties.

To get samples and instructions for installing them:

To access samples from Visual Studio

  • On the Help menu, click Samples.

    By default, these samples are installed in drive:\Program Files\Microsoft Visual Studio 10.0\Samples\.

  • For the most recent version of this sample and a list of other samples, see Visual Studio Samples on the MSDN Web site.

Building and Running the Sample

To build and run this sample

  1. Open the solution acdual.sln.

  2. On the Build menu, click Build Solution.

  3. Set acdual as the startup project (right-click the project node and click Set as StartUp Project) and click the Start button. Acdual will register itself (otherwise the client project couldn't run). Close the acdual application before continuing.

  4. Set autodriv as the startup project and run it. Use the AutoClik Test Drive dialog box to modify the output in the ACDual AClick window.

Comparison with the MFC Version

The differences between this sample and the MFC sample with the same name are:

  • The COleDispatchDriver class is no longer necessary. Instead, #import is used to import a type library.

  • The _bstr_t and _variant_t wrapper classes are used to simplify operations of BSTR and VARIANT types.

  • __declspec(property) is used to simplify assignment operations for properties of COM objects.

  • COM error handling is now performed by using the _com_error class.

With the Visual C++ native compiler COM support, the resulting sample code is shorter and more efficient. The MFC-based ACDUAL sample uses both dual interfaces and dispinterfaces only. Compare this sample with the MFC version to see the differences in source code.

Keywords

This sample demonstrates the following keywords:

dispinterface; #import; _com_ptr_t; _variant_t; _bstr_t; _com_error

See Also

Tasks

ACDUAL Sample: Adds Dual Interfaces to an Automation Application

Reference

Compiler COM Support

Other Resources

Compiler COM Support Samples