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I'd like to play around with customizing the visual studio 2010 rc start page recent items. For what I have in mind I'd need to customize the datasource / databinding but I can't find where the information is coming from.

<ScrollViewer Grid.Row="1" HorizontalAlignment="Stretch" 
    Style="{DynamicResource StartPage.ScrollViewerStyle}" 
    VerticalAlignment="Stretch"  VerticalScrollBarVisibility="Auto">
    <sp:MruListBox 
        DataContext="{Binding Path=RecentProjects}" 
        ItemsSource="{Binding Path=Items}"
        Background="Transparent"
        BorderThickness="0"
        AutomationProperties.AutomationId="MruList"/>
</ScrollViewer>

Can anyone point me in the right direction? I see that it is binding to RecentProjects but where is that coming from?

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  • Did you ever find a description of the properties that each recent project source item contains? Feb 10, 2012 at 18:04

1 Answer 1

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I could not find any real documentation about this. I guess you knew about VS Docs, but it doesn't even scratch the surface.

Since there is a RecentProjects property used in a binding, there should be a type exposing such a property (or an implementation of ICustomTypeDescriptor, see MSDN Magazine). There is also a binding on the TeamFoundationClientSupported "property".

I found a property called TeamFoundationClientSupported in Microsoft.VisualStudio.Shell.UI.Internal, in a class called Microsoft.VisualStudio.PlatformUI.StartPageDataSource, but it is private, so cannot be used as is in a binding. The constructor of this class contains quite a few lines like this:

base.AddBuiltInProperty(StartPageDataSourceSchema.CustomizationEnabledName, GetUserSetting(StartPageDataSourceSchema.CustomizationEnabledName, false));
    ...
base.AddBuiltInProperty(StartPageDataSourceSchema.TeamFoundationClientSupportedName, this.TeamFoundationClientSupported);
    ...
base.AddBuiltInProperty(StartPageDataSourceSchema.RecentProjectsDataSourceName, source3);
    ...

The last 2 are interesting: they "add a built-in property" called TeamFoundationClientSupported and RecentProjects...

Looking at the implementation at this method shows a simple dictionary with a key based on the property name (the first parameter) and the value being the second parameter. This dictionary is used by a method called EnumProperties in Microsoft.Internal.VisualStudio.PlatformUI.UIDataSource. Going through the chain of uses, we arrive at a class called Microsoft.Internal.VisualStudio.PlatformUI.DataSource (in Microsoft.VisualStudio.Shell.10.0), which implements ICustomTypeDescriptor. Thus, it explains how the properties are found by the binding system. I have not found how the DataSource type descriptor is linked to the StartPageDataSource class, but at least we can know the list of supported properties in the StartPageDataSource constructor.

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  • Thanks John. I suppose this is about as good as it's gonna get for right now. Really I just wanted to extend the start page recent items to have the ability to rename the items (particularly the solutions). This would be useful for anyone who works in a mainline scm. At least I know I would get a ton of use out of it:)
    – devlife
    Mar 25, 2010 at 1:54
  • I'm understand what the solution above is talking about, but I still don't understand how I can get a list of the properties that are available on the RecentProjectDataSource. Is there any way to access this is code? Jun 20, 2011 at 6:19
  • I have not read them, but maybe these articles will help: 7388.info/index.php/article/wpf/2011-06-17/18130.html and 7388.info/index.php/article/wpf/2011-06-15/18024.html
    – Timores
    Jun 20, 2011 at 20:21
  • The two links in the last comment are currently showing Chinese or some other Asian language pages. I think they are "404" error pages.
    – RenniePet
    Mar 5, 2013 at 23:10
  • @RenniePet: thank you for pointing this out. I can't remember how I managed to insert bad links. What I meant were these 2 articles: blogs.msdn.com/b/visualstudio/archive/2010/07/29/… and blogs.msdn.com/b/visualstudio/archive/2010/07/29/… Sorry about that.
    – Timores
    Mar 6, 2013 at 9:44

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