1

I am writing a PropertyPage for Outlook using VB6. This is implemented as a VB6 OCX.

When running in a newer version of Outlook (like 2007) on XP (or newer), my dialog looks weird because it doesn't have XP look and feel. Is there a way to do this?

Preferably without adding a manifest file for Outlook.exe.

4 Answers 4

1

I think you're right to avoid using a manifest. Unfortunately the standard well-known hacks to support XP themes from VB6 rely on manifests. This MSDN article on developer solutions for Outlook 2007 warns that providing your own manifest for Outlook 2007 might cause it to hang.

0

I don't think you can do it in VB6 ... those controls are going to look like what they look like. You can, however, create your property pages with Visual Studio .NET and Visual Basic .NET and get the XP, 2007 and Vista look and feel. It's a bit of a change from what you're doing, but you're really behind the times developing with VB6 anyway. More details on how to do that are here and the office developer center.

1
  • Good idea. This particular customer doesn't want to deal with the trouble of installing the .NET runtime across all their endpoints, so the .NET solution is out for me.
    – jm.
    Jun 25, 2009 at 4:11
0

Not that I know of using VB6

If you can use .NET instead - one way is WPF. I saw earlier an example on code-project. Here's the link

Edit: And another tool to assist here

0

This is what I do in all of my VB6 Apps, only ever tested in a standalone EXE so not sure if it will work as an OCX.

Private Type tagInitCommonControlsEx
   lngSize As Long
   lngICC As Long
End Type
Private Declare Function InitCommonControlsEx Lib "comctl32.dll" _
   (iccex As tagInitCommonControlsEx) As Boolean
Private Const ICC_USEREX_CLASSES = &H200

Public Function InitCommonControlsVB() As Boolean
   On Error Resume Next
   Dim iccex As tagInitCommonControlsEx
   ' Ensure CC available:
   With iccex
       .lngSize = LenB(iccex)
       .lngICC = ICC_USEREX_CLASSES
   End With
   InitCommonControlsEx iccex
   InitCommonControlsVB = (Err.Number = 0)
   On Error Goto 0
End Function

Public Sub Main()
   InitCommonControlsVB

   '   
   ' Start your application here:
   ' 

End Sub

Create a file similar to this: http://pastebin.com/f689388b2

Then you add the manifest file to your resource file as type RT_MANIFEST (24)

I can't quite remember if that's all you need to do as I always just use the same pre-made .res file now.

Source: http://www.vbaccelerator.com/home/vb/code/libraries/XP_Visual_Styles/Using_XP_Visual_Styles_in_VB/article.asp

1

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.