RibbonButton.ImageName Property (2007 System)
Gets or sets the name that you can use to identify the button in the LoadImage event handler.
Namespace: Microsoft.Office.Tools.Ribbon
Assembly: Microsoft.Office.Tools.Common.v9.0 (in Microsoft.Office.Tools.Common.v9.0.dll)
Syntax
'Declaration
Public Property ImageName As String
'Usage
Dim instance As RibbonButton
Dim value As String
value = instance.ImageName
instance.ImageName = value
public string ImageName { get; set; }
public:
property String^ ImageName {
String^ get ();
void set (String^ value);
}
public function get ImageName () : String
public function set ImageName (value : String)
Property Value
Type: System.String
A string that you can use in the LoadImage event handler to identify the button.
Remarks
This property can be set at run time only under certain conditions. For more information, see Ribbon Object Model Overview.
For information about setting this property, see Ribbon Object Model Overview.
The ImageName property identifies an image that is displayed by the control. The Office application retrieves this image from your solution only once, to improve performance. This property can be set only at design time, because the image it identifies is loaded during the LoadImage event. LoadImage is raised only once per image name, when the Ribbon is displayed. After that, the control image cannot be changed by using this property.
To load the image, add code to the LoadImage event handler. Check the ImageName property of the RibbonLoadImageEventArgs and set the Image property of the RibbonLoadImageEventArgs object to the image that you want to load.
This property is ignored if either the Image property or the OfficeImageId property is set. Images identified by the ImageName property can be loaded slightly faster than images identified by the Image property, because the Office application retrieves the image from your solution only the first time the Ribbon is displayed.
The ShowImage property must be true for the control to display the image. When you set the ImageName property at design time, Visual Studio Tools for Office automatically sets the ShowImage property to true. If you set the ImageName property at run time, you must set the ShowImage property to true in your code.
Examples
The following example caches the images for two buttons.
To run this code example, you must first perform the following steps:
Add a Ribbon (Visual Designer) item to a Visual Studio Tools for Office project.
Add a group to the custom tab.
Add two buttons to the group.
Add two images to the project resources. For more information, see How to: Add or Remove Resources.
You can then run this code in the generated Ribbon class.
Private Sub Ribbon1_LoadImage(ByVal sender As Object, _
ByVal e As RibbonLoadImageEventArgs)
Select Case e.ImageName
Case "Button1Image"
e.Image = My.Resources.Image1
Case "Button2Image"
e.Image = My.Resources.Image2
End Select
End Sub
private void Ribbon1_LoadImage(object sender, RibbonLoadImageEventArgs e)
{
switch (e.ImageName)
{
case "Button1Image":
e.Image = Properties.Resources.Image1;
break;
case "Button2Image":
e.Image = Properties.Resources.Image2;
break;
}
}
.NET Framework Security
- Full trust for the immediate caller. This member cannot be used by partially trusted code. For more information, see Using Libraries from Partially Trusted Code.
See Also
Reference
Microsoft.Office.Tools.Ribbon Namespace