Example: Finding Other Behavior Controls
Overview Similar to the Example: Camera Control step of this tutorial, you can search for other controls added to the project workspace. There's a number of EZBManager.FormMain methods that make it easy. Additionally, there are a few EZBManager.FormMain events that allow your plugin to watch for added and removed controls. We'll discuss and provide examples of accessing other controls in the current project.
EZBManager.FormMain.OnProjectLoadCompletedb[/b] This event is raised when a project has completed loading all controls to the workspace. This is a handy method if you're looking for a control when the project is loaded. This event will ensure all other behavior controls have loaded before raising. Event raised after a project has completely loaded all behavior controls. If you're control is looking to bind to another control, find the control in this event. If you attempt to look for a control (i.e. camera) during constructor or SetConfiguration, the other control may not have loaded from the config yet. This event is raised after all of the controls have been loaded to the workspace
EZBManager.FormMain.OnBehaviorControlAdded(object newControl, int page) Event raised when a new control is added to the project workspace. The control and virtual desktop page will be returned. Event raised when a control is added to the workspace. This could be during the project load event, or if a user uses the Add Control menu. If you're wanting to keep track of new controls added to the workspace, this is how to do it. However, if you're expecting a control to exist when a project is loaded, look into OnProjectLoadCompleted event.
EZBManager.FormMain.OnBehaviorControlRemovedHandler(object removedControl) Event raised when an existing control is being removed from the project workspace. This is not raised when the application is closing or the project is closing. Contrary to OnBehaviorControlAdded, this event is raised when a control is removed by a user from the current workspace. The control is passed as a parameter, but it won't be actually closed until you release it from the event completing. This means don't expect the control to exist once your method attached to this event has completed.
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
@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
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
@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.
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.