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Implementing CComObject, CComAggObject, and CComPolyObject

The template classes CComObject, CComAggObject, and CComPolyObject are always the most derived classes in the inheritance chain. It is their responsibility to handle all of the methods in IUnknown: QueryInterface, AddRef, and Release. In addition, CComAggObject and CComPolyObject (when used for aggregated objects) provide the special reference counting and QueryInterface semantics required for the inner unknown.

Whether CComObject, CComAggObject, or CComPolyObject is used depends on whether you declare one (or none) of the following macros:

Macro

Effect

DECLARE_NOT_AGGREGATABLE

Always uses CComObject.

DECLARE_AGGREGATABLE

Uses CComAggObject if the object is aggregated and CComObject if it is not. CComCoClass contains this macro so if none of the DECLARE_*_AGGREGATABLE macros are declared in your class, this will be the default.

DECLARE_ONLY_AGGREGATABLE

Always uses CComAggObject. Returns an error if the object is not aggregated.

DECLARE_POLY_AGGREGATABLE

ATL creates an instance of CComPolyObject<CYourClass> when IClassFactory::CreateInstance is called. During creation, the value of the outer unknown is checked. If it is NULL, IUnknown is implemented for a nonaggregated object. If the outer unknown is not NULL, IUnknown is implemented for an aggregated object.

The advantage of using CComAggObject and CComObject is that the implementation of IUnknown is optimized for the kind of object being created. For instance, a nonaggregated object only needs a reference count, while an aggregated object needs both a reference count for the inner unknown and a pointer to the outer unknown.

The advantage of using CComPolyObject is that you avoid having both CComAggObject and CComObject in your module to handle the aggregated and nonaggregated cases. A single CComPolyObject object handles both cases. This means only one copy of the vtable and one copy of the functions exist in your module. If your vtable is large, this can substantially decrease your module size. However, if your vtable is small, using CComPolyObject can result in a slightly larger module size because it is not optimized for an aggregated or nonaggregated object, as are CComAggObject and CComObject.

See Also

Reference

Fundamentals of ATL COM Objects

Other Resources

Aggregation and Class Factory Macros