ClassInterfaceType Enumeration
Assembly: mscorlib (in mscorlib.dll)
'Declaration <SerializableAttribute> _ <ComVisibleAttribute(True)> _ Public Enumeration ClassInterfaceType 'Usage Dim instance As ClassInterfaceType
/** @attribute SerializableAttribute() */ /** @attribute ComVisibleAttribute(true) */ public enum ClassInterfaceType
SerializableAttribute ComVisibleAttribute(true) public enum ClassInterfaceType
| Member name | Description | |
|---|---|---|
| AutoDispatch | Indicates that the class only supports late binding for COM clients. A dispinterface for the class is automatically exposed to COM clients on request. The type library produced by the type Type Library Exporter (Tlbexp.exe) does not contain type information for the dispinterface in order to prevent clients from caching the DISPIDs of the interface. The dispinterface does not exhibit the versioning problems described in ClassInterfaceAttribute because clients can only late bind to the interface. This is the default setting for ClassInterfaceAttribute. | |
| AutoDual | Indicates that a dual class interface is automatically generated for the class and exposed to COM. Type information is produced for the class interface and published in the type library. Using AutoDual is strongly discouraged because of the versioning limitations described in ClassInterfaceAttribute. | |
![]() | None | Indicates that no class interface is generated for the class. If no interfaces are implemented explicitly, the class can only provide late bound access through the IDispatch interface. This is the recommended setting for ClassInterfaceAttribute. Using ClassInterfaceType.None is the only way to expose functionality through interfaces implemented explicitly by the class. The Type Library Exporter (Tlbexp.exe) exposes the first public, COM-visible interface implemented by the class as the default interface of the coclass. Beginning with the .NET Framework version 2.0, you can specify the default interface exposed to COM by using the ComDefaultInterfaceAttribute attribute. If the class implements no interfaces, the first public, COM-visible interface implemented by a base class becomes the default interface (starting with the most recently derived base class and working backward). Tlbexp.exe exposes _Object as the default interface if neither the class nor its base classes implement interfaces. |
This enumeration is used in conjunction with the ClassInterfaceAttribute attribute.
This example shows how to apply the ClassInterfaceAttribute to a type, setting the ClassInterfaceType. Classes defined this way can be used from unmanaged COM.
Imports System Imports System.Runtime.InteropServices ' Have the CLR expose a class interface (derived from IDispatch) for this type. ' COM clients can call the members of this class using the Invoke method from the IDispatch interface. <ClassInterface(ClassInterfaceType.AutoDispatch)> _ Public Class AClassUsableViaCOM Public Sub New() End Sub Public Function Add(ByVal x As Int32, ByVal y As Int32) As Int32 Return x + y End Function End Class ' The CLR does not expose a class interface for this type. ' COM clients can call the members of this class using the methods from the IComparable interface. <ClassInterface(ClassInterfaceType.None)> _ Public Class AnotherClassUsableViaCOM Implements IComparable Public Sub New() End Sub Function CompareTo(ByVal o As [Object]) As Int32 Implements IComparable.CompareTo Return 0 End Function 'IComparable.CompareTo End Class
Windows 98, Windows Server 2000 SP4, Windows CE, Windows Millennium Edition, Windows Mobile for Pocket PC, Windows Mobile for Smartphone, Windows Server 2003, Windows XP Media Center Edition, Windows XP Professional x64 Edition, Windows XP SP2, Windows XP Starter Edition
The Microsoft .NET Framework 3.0 is supported on Windows Vista, Microsoft Windows XP SP2, and Windows Server 2003 SP1.