How to: Publish a WPF Application with Visual Styles Enabled
Note
This article applies to Visual Studio 2015. If you're looking for the latest Visual Studio documentation, see Visual Studio documentation. We recommend upgrading to the latest version of Visual Studio. Download it here
Visual styles enable the appearance of common controls to change based on the theme chosen by the user. By default, visual styles are not enabled for Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) applications, so you must enable them manually. However, enabling visual styles for a WPF application and then publishing the solution causes an error. This topic describes how to resolve this error and the process for publishing a WPF application with visual styles enabled. For more information about visual styles, see Visual Styles Overview. For more information about the error message, see Troubleshooting Specific Errors in ClickOnce Deployments.
To resolve the error and to publish the solution, you must perform the following tasks:
Embed the manifest file into the executable file of the published solution.
Sign the application and deployment manifests.
Then, you can move the published files to the location from which you want end users to install the application.
Publish the solution without visual styles enabled
Ensure that your project does not have visual styles enabled. First, check your project’s manifest file for the following XML. Then, if the XML is present, enclose the XML with a comment tag.
By default, visual styles are not enabled.
<dependency> <dependentAssembly> <assemblyIdentity type="win32" name="Microsoft.Windows.Common-Controls" version="6.0.0.0" processorArchitecture="*" publicKeyToken="6595b64144ccf1df" language="*" /> </dependentAssembly> </dependency>
The following procedures show how to open the manifest file associated with your project.
To open the manifest file in a Visual Basic project
On the menu bar, choose Project, ProjectNameProperties, where ProjectName is the name of your WPF project.
The property pages for your WPF project appear.
On the Application tab, choose View Windows Settings.
The app.manifest file opens in the Code Editor.
To open the manifest file in a C# project
On the menu bar, choose Project, ProjectNameProperties, where ProjectName is the name of your WPF project.
The property pages for your WPF project appear.
On the Application tab, make a note of the name that appears in the manifest field. This is the name of the manifest that is associated with your project.
Note
If Embed manifest with default settings or Create application without manifest appear in the manifest field, visual styles are not enabled. If the name of a manifest file appears in the manifest field, proceed to the next step in this procedure.
In Solution Explorer, choose Show All Files ().
This button shows all project items, including those that have been excluded and those that are normally hidden. The manifest file appears as a project item.
Build and publish your solution. For more information about how to publish the solution, see How to: Publish a ClickOnce Application using the Publish Wizard.
Create a manifest file
Paste the following XML into a Notepad file.
This XML describes the assembly that contains controls that support visual styles.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?> <asmv1:assembly manifestVersion="1.0" xmlns="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:asm.v1" xmlns:asmv1="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:asm.v1" xmlns:asmv2="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:asm.v2" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"> <dependency> <dependentAssembly> <assemblyIdentity type="win32" name="Microsoft.Windows.Common-Controls" version="6.0.0.0" processorArchitecture="*" publicKeyToken="6595b64144ccf1df" language="*" /> </dependentAssembly> </dependency> </asmv1:assembly>
In Notepad, click File, and then click Save As.
In the Save As dialog box, in the Save as type drop-down list, select All Files.
In the File name box, name the file and append .manifest to the end of the file name. For example: themes.manifest.
Choose the Browse Folders button, select any folder, and then click Save.
Note
The remaining procedures assume that the name of this file is themes.manifest and that the file is saved to the C:\temp directory on your computer.
Embed the manifest file into the executable file of the published solution
Open the Visual Studio Command Prompt.
For more information about how to open the Visual Studio Command Prompt, see Command Prompts.
Note
The remaining steps make the following assumptions about your solution:
The name of the solution is MyWPFProject.
The solution is located in the following directory:
%UserProfile%\Documents\Visual Studio 2010\Projects\
.The solution is published to the following directory:
%UserProfile%\Documents\Visual Studio 2010\Projects\publish
.The most recent version of the published application files is located in the following directory:
%UserProfile%\Documents\Visual Studio 2010\Projects\publish\Application Files\WPFApp_1_0_0_0
You do not have to use the name or the directory locations described above. The name and locations described above are used only to illustrate the steps required to publish your solution.
At the command prompt, change the path to the directory that contains the most recent version of the published application files. The following example demonstrates this step.
cd "%UserProfile%\Documents\Visual Studio 2010\Projects\MyWPFProject\publish\Application Files\WPFApp_1_0_0_0"
At the command prompt, run the following command to embed the manifest file into the executable file of the application.
mt –manifest c:\temp\themes.manifest –outputresource:MyWPFApp.exe.deploy
Sign the application and deployment manifests
At the command prompt, run the following command to remove the
.deploy
extension from the executable file in the current directory.ren MyWPFApp.exe.deploy MyWPFApp.exe
Note
This example assumes that only one file has the
.deploy
file extension. Make sure that you rename all files in this directory that have the.deploy
file extension.At the command prompt, run the following command to sign the application manifest.
mage -u MyWPFApp.exe.manifest -cf ..\..\..\MyWPFApp_TemporaryKey.pfx
Note
This example assumes that you sign the manifest by using the
.pfx
file of the project. If you are not signing the manifest, you can omit the–cf
parameter that is used in this example. If you are signing the manifest with a certificate that requires a password, specify the–password
option (For example: mage –u MyWPFApp.exe.manifest –cf ..\..\..\MyWPFApp_TemporaryKey.pfx – password Password
).At the command prompt, run the following command to add the
.deploy
extension to the name of the file that you renamed in a previous step of this procedure.ren MyWPFApp.exe MyWPFApp.exe.deploy
Note
This example assumes that only one file had a
.deploy
file extension. Make sure that you rename all files in this directory that previously had the.deploy
file name extension.At the command prompt, run the following command to sign the deployment manifest.
mage -u ..\..\MyWPFApp.application -appm MyWPFApp.exe.manifest -cf ..\..\..\MyWPFApp_TemporaryKey.pfx
Note
This example assumes that you sign the manifest by using the
.pfx
file of the project. If you are not signing the manifest, you can omit the–cf
parameter that is used in this example. If you are signing the manifest with a certificate that requires a password, specify the–password
option, as in this example:For example: mage –u MyWPFApp.exe.manifest –cf ..\..\..\MyWPFApp_TemporaryKey.pfx – password Password
.After you have performed these steps, you can move the published files to the location from which you want end users to install the application. If you intend to update the solution often, you can move these commands into a script and run the script each time that you publish a new version.
See Also
Troubleshooting Specific Errors in ClickOnce Deployments Visual Styles Overview Command Prompts