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Working with VS.NET 2008, output type Class Library, Target Framework .NET 2.0

I've come up with a simplified scenario to ask this question.

I have a Button user control, its a simple panel with a single big button on it.

I want to create a RedButton control that extends Button, and similarly, a GreenButton.
e.g. Class RedButton : Button

Ideally, when I open up RedButton's designer I will see the button that I created in Button and be able to modify it, for example make it Red, or change font, etc.

I've tried to do this once, but when I open up the RedButton's designer I just get a bunch of errors.

In this case, doing all this work programatically isn't an option for us, as in the real case this would be a pain.

Could someone shed some light on this? Thanks Very Much.

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  • I assume you are using WinForms ? Dec 16, 2008 at 14:08
  • Has your question been answered?
    – David
    Dec 24, 2008 at 17:37

6 Answers 6

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Truthfully, your example should work just fine. Just ensure that you provide a default constructor for your derived class. Also ensure that you do not use generic controls as the designer will have no clue how to create an instance of it.

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Is your assembly setup to be delay signed? Look for the delay signing attribute as well as the checkbox in project properties. I've seen delay signing cause this sort of problem with VS2005 perhaps its still a problem in VS2008.

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I had to deal with this problem for years at an old company. I researched it a little back then. I don't think that there is a solution for this.

I don't know how much you want to extend the base class in your real example, but the changes you mentioned in your example would be trivial. Just something like

btnTheButton.BackGround=Color.Red; 

In reality, probably whatever changes you need to make to button could be done in a few minutes. It is unfortunate that this will be a few minutes everytime you need to inherit a new control, but I think it's the only option

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If the control you inherit from is from a DLL and not just another class in the solution, then your designer will render the inherited control properly. My guess is that the VS Design View needs the DLL to draw the control. There may be other ways around this as well.

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Since VS.NET 2008 the root designer is able to present "bunch of errors" as you mentioned. In general the described scenario should “just work”.

What kind of errors are you facing?

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Follow this example if you aren't already:

public class RedButton : Button

then in the XAML instead of

<UserControl></UserControl>

Start/end your XAML file with

<Button></Button>

Note that it is okay to inherit from something in another namespace even though you didn't define the namespace yet. Example:

<radDock:RadPane ...            
        xmlns:radDock="clr-namespace:Telerik.Windows.Controls;assembly=Telerik.Windows.Controls.Docking"
        ...
        Title="{Binding Path=StudyTitle}"...

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