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Few days back I started reading COM. Then one of my team member told that it is an old technology, now a days no one is using this.

My question is:

1) If it is an old technology then what is the alternative for that.

2) Why should not I need to use COM. Ie what is the drawback of the COM.

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    Have you read anything about COM? Like the Wikipedia page on it? COM may be "old", but it's still the base of much of how Windows works. For example, if you want to access an Excel worksheet, you have to use COM. Nov 22, 2012 at 3:00
  • if you are using .net technologies, you may not need to use COM Nov 22, 2012 at 3:11
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    COM is overly complicated for most uses because it tries to solve problems most people don't have - objects spread across machines, or interoperability with VB for example. Nov 22, 2012 at 3:12
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    @MarkRansom, what about IPC (in the same machine), shell extensions, IE plugins, OLE (including drag&drop), DirectX, Windows Runtime, in-process and session-wide running objects tables, scripting (not just VBScript), etc?
    – acelent
    Nov 22, 2012 at 17:41

3 Answers 3

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COM is an 'old technology' in the same way C++ is. Just because it's old doesn't mean it's out-of-date. The reason Microsoft keeps coming back to it (Windows 8 makes big use of it) is because it's a relatively low-overhead object based technology. There's no big run-time to initialize before using COM (although a component could initialize a run-time if it needed to, e.g..NET CCW).

The interface/implementation boundary is kept strictly separate so it is useful for exposing Windows functionality in an object orientated way (as well as DirectX the Windows Shell is based around COM).

COM suffers from a general misunderstanding of what's COM and what's built on top of COM. ActiveX, DCOM, OLE, COM+, etc. are built on COM but do not define what COM is. COM itself as a core technology has been kept relatively simple.

I say relatively because COM is not perfect. The apartment model can cause significant problems, such as cross-apartment marshalling requiring an application to pump a message queue. Back in the late nineties people were going COM mad and making everything out of COM components and it caused unnecessary complexity in applications. However, it's a well tested technology and when used properly it works well, especially for exposing or consuming functionality for 3rd parties. If you want to really understand the Windows API you need to know how COM works.

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1) If it is an old technology then what is the alternative for that.

COM is certainly old. Microsoft's "alternative" to it was/is .NET, but means you need to play along with the CLR (so native C++ doesn't get to play along, you would need C++/CLI for this). The latest alternative is now called WinRT (Windows Runtime). WinRT is currently only available for Windows 8 and Windows Server 2012. At the lowest level, WinRT is actually COM, but Microsoft has rethought a lot of its pitfalls. Platform/language agnostic alternatives include Google Protocol Buffers, Apache Thrift, and SOAP.

2) Why should not I need to use COM. Ie what is the drawback of the COM.

COM's primary purpose is inter-process communication (IPC). If, for example, you have two applications written in two programming languages and wish for them to communicate, COM is a (windows-specific) solution. COM was used extensively in the 90's to communicate between C++ and VB6 applications. If you don't have a need for IPC, then your prospects for COM are pretty low. We use COM most commonly at work today to do IPC across native C++ applications and managed .NET applications written in C#.

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  • "We use COM most commonly at work today to do IPC" DirectX is COM, you know.
    – SigTerm
    Nov 22, 2012 at 4:35
  • We don't do anything with DirectX at work, so I'm not sure how that statement matters to the quoted text. Also, doing DirectX over COM could still be considered IPC, yes? The other process just happens to be a OS library.
    – Bret Kuhns
    Nov 22, 2012 at 4:41
  • @BretKuhns, there's COM without IPC and syscalls, actually lots of it. Unless you consider that a simple completely user-space function call is IPC. COM was indeed used for VB6 components (I'd rather say it was chosen), but it wasn't the only way to communicate with C++ code, you could always export DLL functions and expose function addresses.
    – acelent
    Nov 22, 2012 at 17:54
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The newest big microsoft "technology", the WinRT runtime for writing windows 8 metro apps (whatever they are called now...) relies entirely on COM so it's certainly not obsolete.

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