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Visualization Manager

 

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The latest version of this topic can be found at Visualization Manager.

The visual manager is an object that controls the appearance of a whole application. It acts as a single class where you can put all the drawing code for your application. The MFC Library includes several visual managers. You can also create your own visual manager if you want to create a custom view for your application. The following images show the same application when different visual managers are enabled:

MyApp as rendered by CMFCVisualManagerWindows
MyApp that uses the CMFCVisualManagerWindows visual manager

MyApp as rendered by CMFCVisualManagerVS2005
MyApp that uses the CMFCVisualManagerVS2005 visual manager

MyApp as rendered by CMFCVisualManagerOfficeXP
MyApp that uses the CMFCVisualManagerOfficeXP visual manager

MyApp as rendered by CMFCVisualManagerOffice2003
MyApp that uses the CMFCVisualManagerOffice2003 visual manager

MyApp as rendered by CMFCVisualManagerOffice2007
MyApp that uses the CMFCVisualManagerOffice2007 visual manager

By default, the visual manager maintains the drawing code for several GUI elements. To provide custom UI elements, you need to override the related drawing methods of the visual manager. For the list of these methods, see CMFCVisualManager Class. The methods that you can override to provide a custom appearance are all the methods that start with OnDraw.

Your application can have only one CMFCVisualManager object. To obtain a pointer to the visual manager for your application, call the static function CMFCVisualManager::GetInstance. Because all visual managers inherit from CMFCVisualManager, the CMFCVisualManager::GetInstance method will get a pointer to the appropriate visual manager, even if you create a custom visual manager.

If you want to create a custom visual manager, you must derive it from a visual manager that already exists. The default class to derive from is CMFCVisualManager. However, you can use a different visual manager if it better resembles what you want for your application. For example, if you wanted to use the CMFCVisualManagerOffice2007 visual manager, but wanted only to change how separators look, you could derive your custom class from CMFCVisualManagerOffice2007. In this scenario, you should overwrite only the methods for drawing separators.

There are two possible ways to use a specific visual manager for your application. One way is to call the CMFCVisualManager::SetDefaultManager method and pass the appropriate visual manager as a parameter. The following code example shows how you would use the CMFCVisualManagerVS2005 visual manager with this method:

CMFCVisualManager::SetDefaultManager (RUNTIME_CLASS (CMFCVisualManagerVS2005));

The other way to use a visual manager in your application is to create it manually. The application will then use this new visual manager for all the rendering. However, because there can be only one CMFCVisualManager object per application, you will have to delete the current visual manager before you create a new one. In the following example, CMyVisualManager is a custom visual manager that is derived from CMFCVisualManager. The following method will change what visual manager is used to display your application, depending on an index:

void CMyApp::SetSkin (int index)  
{  
    if (CMFCVisualManager::GetInstance() != NULL)  
 {  
    delete CMFCVisualManager::GetInstance();

 }  
 
    switch (index)  
 {  
    case DEFAULT_STYLE: *// The following statement creates a new CMFCVisualManager  
    CMFCVisualManager::GetInstance();
break;  
 
    case CUSTOM_STYLE:  
    new CMyVisualManager;  
    break; 
 
    default: 
    CMFCVisualManager::GetInstance();
break;  
 }  
 
    CMFCVisualManager::GetInstance()->RedrawAll();

} 

See Also

User Interface Elements
CMFCVisualManager Class