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Commands2.AddNamedCommand2 Method

Definition

Caution

AddIn related extension points are no longer supported in Visual Studio.

Creates a named command that is saved by the environment and made available the next time the environment starts, even if the add-in is not loaded on environment startup.

EnvDTE::Command AddNamedCommand2(EnvDTE::AddIn const & AddInInstance, std::wstring const & Name, std::wstring const & ButtonText, std::wstring const & Tooltip, bool MSOButton, winrt::Windows::Foundation::IInspectable const & Bitmap, std::Array <winrt::Windows::Foundation::IInspectable const &> const & & ContextUIGUIDs, int vsCommandStatusValue = 3, int CommandStyleFlags = 3, EnvDTE80::vsCommandControlType ControlType = EnvDTE80.vsCommandControlType.vsCommandControlTypeButton);
[System.Runtime.InteropServices.DispId(20)]
public EnvDTE.Command AddNamedCommand2 (EnvDTE.AddIn AddInInstance, string Name, string ButtonText, string Tooltip, bool MSOButton, object Bitmap, ref object[] ContextUIGUIDs, int vsCommandStatusValue = 3, int CommandStyleFlags = 3, EnvDTE80.vsCommandControlType ControlType = EnvDTE80.vsCommandControlType.vsCommandControlTypeButton);
[System.Runtime.InteropServices.DispId(20)]
[System.Obsolete("AddIn related extension points are no longer supported in Visual Studio.")]
public EnvDTE.Command AddNamedCommand2 (EnvDTE.AddIn AddInInstance, string Name, string ButtonText, string Tooltip, bool MSOButton, object Bitmap, ref object[] ContextUIGUIDs, int vsCommandStatusValue = 3, int CommandStyleFlags = 3, EnvDTE80.vsCommandControlType ControlType = EnvDTE80.vsCommandControlType.vsCommandControlTypeButton);
[<System.Runtime.InteropServices.DispId(20)>]
abstract member AddNamedCommand2 : EnvDTE.AddIn * string * string * string * bool * obj * Object[] * int * int * EnvDTE80.vsCommandControlType -> EnvDTE.Command
[<System.Runtime.InteropServices.DispId(20)>]
[<System.Obsolete("AddIn related extension points are no longer supported in Visual Studio.")>]
abstract member AddNamedCommand2 : EnvDTE.AddIn * string * string * string * bool * obj * Object[] * int * int * EnvDTE80.vsCommandControlType -> EnvDTE.Command
Public Function AddNamedCommand2 (AddInInstance As AddIn, Name As String, ButtonText As String, Tooltip As String, MSOButton As Boolean, Optional Bitmap As Object, Optional ByRef ContextUIGUIDs As Object(), Optional vsCommandStatusValue As Integer = 3, Optional CommandStyleFlags As Integer = 3, Optional ControlType As vsCommandControlType = EnvDTE80.vsCommandControlType.vsCommandControlTypeButton) As Command

Parameters

AddInInstance
AddIn

Required. The AddIn that is adding the new command.

Name
String

Required. The short form of the name for your new command. AddNamedCommand2(AddIn, String, String, String, Boolean, Object, Object[], Int32, Int32, vsCommandControlType) uses the preface Addins.Progid. to create a unique name.

ButtonText
String

Required. The name to show in the UI for this command.

Tooltip
String

Required. The text displayed when a user hovers the mouse pointer over any control bound to the new command.

MSOButton
Boolean

Required. Must be false.

Bitmap
Object

Optional. The ID of a bitmap to display on the button.

Bitmap can be one of the following:

- A Bitmap

- An Icon

- An IPicture

- The ID of a 16x16 bitmap resource (but not an icon resource) that is provided by the add-in. Visual Studio looks first in the add-in's satellite DLL. If the resource is not found there, the add-in DLL will be searched.

ContextUIGUIDs
Object[]

Optional. The GUIDs that determine which environment contexts (that is, debug mode, design mode, and so on) show the command.

vsCommandStatusValue
Int32

Optional. Determines whether the disabled state of the command is invisible or disabled when you supply a ContextUIGUIDs parameter and none are currently active. See vsCommandDisabledFlags.

CommandStyleFlags
Int32

Optional. One of the vsCommandStyle flags, in particular vsCommandStylePict, vsCommandStylePictAndText, or vsCommandStyleText.

ControlType
vsCommandControlType

Optional. Defines the control type added when the UI is created.

Returns

The named command that was created.

Attributes

Remarks

Add-ins can later change the ButtonText name by responding to the QueryStatus method. If the text begins with #, then the rest of the string is an integer that represents a resource ID in the Add-in's registered satellite DLL.

There are two default command states: the default enabled state and the default visibility state. These default states are important if a command handler cannot be found (because the component isn't loaded or doesn't implement IDTCommandTarget). If your component is loaded and implements IDTCommandTarget, the default values never apply.

There are two interesting cases where default states are used:

  1. You provide UI context GUIDs via the ContextUIGUIDs parameter. In this case visibility is entirely determined by the supplied context GUIDS. If the context is active, then your command is visible, otherwise it is hidden. Enabled state is entirely determined by the default values. By default in Visual Studio a command is always enabled if you pass vsCommandDisabledFlagsGrey then your default state will be disabled. If you pass vsCommandDisabledFlagsEnabled, or you simply don't supply this parameter, then your default state is enabled.

  2. You do not provide UI context GUIDs via the ContextUIGUIDs parameter. In this case visibility is based on the flags you pass to vsCommandStatusValue or the default state. Default command visibility in VS is to be visible. If you pass vsCommandDisabledFlagsHidden here, the default is invisible. Enabled state is the same here as it is in case 1 above (determined by the flags and/or default VS behavior).

The addin can receive invocation notification through the IDTCommandTarget interface. A button can be added by using the OnConnection method of the IDTExtensibility2 interface.

Applies to