Make an ARC Skill

Example: Global Script Variables

The ARC variable manager stores and retrieves global variables that are available within ARC plugins and controls. This allows you to Set and Get variables that other controls may be configuring or using.

Data Types The script variable stores dynamic data types. This means that there is no declaration between numeric or string values. For example in JavaScript you would type...


setVar("$a", 3);
setVar("$b", 3.123);
setVar("$c", "This is a string");
setVar("$d", 0x55);

And in C# plugin you would type...


ARC.Scripting.VariableManager.SetVariable("$a", 3);
ARC.Scripting.VariableManager.SetVariable("$b", 3.123);
ARC.Scripting.VariableManager.SetVariable("$c", "This is a string");
ARC.Scripting.VariableManager.SetVariable("$d", 0x055);

Single Variables ARC.Scripting.VariableManager.ClearVariable(string variableName) Clear the variable and remove it from memory.

ARC.Scripting.VariableManager.ClearVariables() Clear the entire variable memory.

ARC.Scripting.VariableManager.DoesVariableExist(string variableName) Returns a Boolean if the variable has been defined in memory.

ARC.Scripting.VariableManager.DumpVariablesToString() Returns a string with each variable and the corresponding value (one per line). This is similar to the Variable Manager control found in EZ-Builder->Add Control->Scripting->Variable Manager.

ARC.Scripting.VariableManager.GetVariable(string variableName) Get the value stored in the specified variable.

ARC.Scripting.VariableManager.GetVariable(string variableName, int index) Get the value stored in the specified index of the array variable.

ARC.Scripting.VariableManager.SetVariable(string variableName, object value) Set the value into the memory location of the specified variable. If the variable does not exist, this will create the variable and assign the value.

Array Variables ARC.Scripting.VariableManager.AppendToVariableArray(string variableName, object value) Append the value to the existing array.

ARC.Scripting.VariableManager.CreateVariableArray(string variableName, byte[] values) ARC.Scripting.VariableManager.CreateVariableArray(string variableName, string[] values) ARC.Scripting.VariableManager.CreateVariableArray(string variableName, object defaultValue, int size) Create an array variable and specify the default values. Use AppendToVariableArray() to add more items to this array.

ARC.Scripting.VariableManager.FillVariableArray(string variableName, object defaultValue) If a variable array already exists, this will fill every defined index of the array with the specified value.

ARC.Scripting.VariableManager.GetArraySize(string variableName) Returns an integer that is the index size of the specified array variable.

ARC.Scripting.VariableManager.IsVariableArray(string variableName) Returns a Boolean if the specified variable is an array.

ARC.Scripting.VariableManager.SetVariable(string variableName, object value, int index) Set the value into the index of the specified array variable. The array size must already be defined. If you attempt to set a value to an index outside of the index size, an exception will be thrown.

Monitoring Variable Changes The variable manager has an event which will be raised for any variable changes. If your plugin has a variable that you wish to watch for changes, subscribe to the event. Remember to unsubscribe from the event when your plugin closes, as per the plugin Compliance section of this tutorial. Below is an example of subscribing, checking for a variable change, and unsubscribing when the plugin closes.

If the variable is an array, the index will be populated with the array index that has changed. If the variable is not an array, the index will equal -1.


private MyForm() {

  InitializeComponent();

  // Subscribe to variable change event
  ARC.Scripting.VariableManager.OnVariableChanged += VariableManager_OnVariableChanged;
}

private void FormMain_FormClosing(object sender, FormClosingEventArgs e) {

  // Unsubscribe to variable change event
  ARC.Scripting.VariableManager.OnVariableChanged -= VariableManager_OnVariableChanged;
}

private void VariableManager_OnVariableChanged(string variableName, object value, int index) {

  if (!variableName.Equals("$myVariable", StringComparison.InvariantCultureIgnoreCase))
    return;

  // Do something because the variable has changed
}


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Synthiam
#25  

When the popup says it doesn’t detect visual studio, you can still skip and continue. I wonder why it’s not detecting it? We had a hard time trying to find a proper way of detecting - even Microsoft’s suggestion didn’t actually work eye roll

ill look into it a bit further and see if we can find a better way of detecting

PRO
USA
#26  

@DJ: It's easy to find the Visual Studio 2017 and up: Microsoft: https://github.com/Microsoft/vswhere/wiki/Find-MSBuild

Some quick c# code to use with .NET: https://github.com/ppedro74/Utils/blob/master/FindVisualStudio/Program.cs

using System;
using System.Diagnostics;
using System.IO;

namespace FindVisualStudio
{
    internal class Program
    {
        static string ProcessStart(string fileName, string args)
        {
            var processStartInfo = new ProcessStartInfo
            {
                Arguments = args,
                CreateNoWindow = true,
                FileName = fileName,
                RedirectStandardOutput = true,
                UseShellExecute = false,
                WindowStyle = ProcessWindowStyle.Hidden,
                WorkingDirectory = Path.GetDirectoryName(fileName),
            };

            using (var process = Process.Start(processStartInfo))
            {
                process.WaitForExit();
                return process.StandardOutput.ReadToEnd().Trim();
            }
        }

        private static string GetInstallationPath(string vsWhere)
        {
            var installationPath = ProcessStart(vsWhere, "-latest -products * -requires Microsoft.Component.MSBuild -property installationPath");
            return installationPath;
        }

        private static string GetProductLineVersion(string vsWhere)
        {
            var version = ProcessStart(vsWhere, "-latest -property catalog_productLineVersion");
            return version;
        }


        private static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            var programFiles = Environment.GetFolderPath(Environment.SpecialFolder.ProgramFilesX86);
            var vsWhere = Path.Combine(programFiles, "Microsoft Visual Studio", "Installer", "vswhere.exe");
            if (!File.Exists(vsWhere))
            {
                throw new FileNotFoundException("Cannot find Microsoft Visual Studio's vswhere.exe utility.", vsWhere);
            }

            var version = GetProductLineVersion(vsWhere);
            Console.WriteLine($"Visual Studio Version: {version}");

            var installationPath = GetInstallationPath(vsWhere);
            if (!Directory.Exists(installationPath))
            {
                throw new DirectoryNotFoundException(installationPath);
            }

            Console.WriteLine($"Visual Studio installation Path: {installationPath}");

        }
    }
}
PRO
USA
#27   — Edited

Quote:

With Visual Studio 2017 Update 2 or newer installed, you can find vswhere at %ProgramFiles(x86)%\Microsoft Visual Studio\Installer\vswhere.exe, or to make sure it's always available in your repo see Installing for an option using NuGet.
Because is only available with "Visual Studio 2017 Update 2", you can add the vswhere package to your ARC project, and use your version (nuget) to detect older 2017 or legacy Visual Studio Versions (although does not make sense for ARC). https://devblogs.microsoft.com/setup/vswhere-now-searches-older-versions-of-visual-studio/

PRO
Synthiam
#28   — Edited

We went this route and it didn’t work on my computer - because I had a preview of visual studio installed which isn’t in that directory path. Microsoft had numerous suggestions of detecting visual studio. The one which worked for our various installations was a registry check.

apparently with the above individual, the registry didn’t work either. I’ll have to combine a few methods.

everything looks simple from the outside - until you have a hundred thousand+ installations of your software. That’s when you run into things like this lol

PRO
USA
#29   — Edited

@DJ: I agree sometimes the things go out of script easily.

I avoid going through the registry keys, unless is recommended by the vendor. A lot of people blame the changes (keys,  entries are renamed etc), but, that is normal if I own my product is my business and is part of the software evolution. Some products you can break the support contract agreement if you query directly the database, or if you look elsewhere outside of the public API.

Is true story some years ago a "rogue" developer on my team released a Sharepoint integration using a mix of APIs and database queries, everything worked well with multiple clients, until one day the Microsoft Black suits visit one of the customers to follow up on an unrelated support ticket, and they basically used "unsupported" card and left the client hanging, and we had problems too, unfortunately the Rogue developer went to another galaxy ... and the team suffered the consequences.

That does not mean I'm not tempted to do it...:)

I used the vswhere before and I would say is almost 99% bulletproof, is used with Xamarin, NVIDIA, Intel setups. If you add vswhere.exe to your project (nuget package) you cover scenarios where the tool is not present or have been deleted (broken uninstalls).

The other fallback could be ask the user the visual studio version.

The other reason to avoid registry is due to Visual Studio uses a private exclusive registry keys to store more stuff:  http://www.visualstudioextensibility.com/2017/07/15/about-the-new-privateregistry-bin-file-of-visual-studio-2017/

So the things are getting more complex.

The above post is only part of the "Full solution" for example I have one setup with visual studio 2017 c# installed and Visual studio 2019 with Python and C++, vswhere will return 2019 version,  but my c# is done with VS2017.

If you are generating customized vs version project files, maybe a fallback (ask the VS version) will cover more bases.

PRO
Synthiam
#30  

Yes - Microsoft has a few pages on how to identify visual studio and we tried them all during testing - the one we went with was with registry. I'm going to combine the two as using only one method apparently doesn't work for all cases.