vote up 2 vote down star

I have downloaded the official office 2007 UI ribbon .dll, but now what? I am coding in VB.net. I do not know where to place this .dll, and I do not see any additional controls anywhere at all. The readme explains how to license your copy, which I have done.

Now what? I am hoping to magically see the ribbon control in the list of components I can add somewhere, but its just not there....

Is there even a way to use this as a drag-n-drop component with the WYSIWYG Design View?

EDIT: To clarify, my goal is to use the Ribbon in my own work, not to modify the Office ribbon or to develop a plugin for it. I cannot find any free ribbon anywhere, and I am not sure if this .dll I have is what I need.

flag

Do you want to customize the Office ribbon UI or create a ribbon in your own application? – divo Aug 18 at 18:36
Create a ribbon in my own application, preferably being able to use the Design view. – Cyclone Aug 18 at 18:37
Wow... remember when you were at this level? Everything was a struggle and you only knew enough to know how amazingly clueless you were. Wait, I'm still like that now. Never mind. – Will Aug 18 at 18:38
I am at this level lol. Why else would I be here now :P – Cyclone Aug 18 at 18:49

4 Answers

vote up 2 vote down check

I'd suggest the following alternative to the Microsoft ribbon:

A Professional Ribbon You Will Use (Now with orb!)

There have been discussions here on SO about the licensing required for use of the Office ribbon.

To begin using, first add a reference to the DLL in your solution:

  1. In VS, right click your WinForm project and select Add Reference...
  2. On the Add Reference dialog, select the Browse tab and navigate to and select the DLL.
  3. Click OK on the Add Reference dialog.

To use the Ribbon check out the tutorial here.

Also, the Ribbon's author opened a CodePlex project for the component here.

Edit: Problems adding controls to the Ribbon.

The instructions found on the Getting Started page worked for me when I last played with the ribbon, but they don't now. Maybe it's the version of Visual Studio I'm using (I believe I was using VS2005 Pro then, now I'm using VS2008 Pro).

In VS 2008 I was able to add controls to the RibbonPanel by using the Panel's Items property. Here's how:

  1. Add a Ribbon to your form.
  2. Add a Panel to the Ribbon by clicking the 'Add Panel' icon on the Ribbon.
  3. Select the Panel you just added and select 'Items' from the Panel's property screen.
  4. On the RibbonButton Collection Editor screen click Add (or select a specific control from the Add button's drop down list). Be sure to set your new control's properties on the properties side of this dialog.
  5. Click the OK button on the Editor screen.

The component was pretty flaky in the designer:

  • Controls added did not appear until I closed the designer and reopened it.
  • Controls deleted through the designer did not clean out the code associated with the Ribbon controls (I had to delete all lines associated with the Ribbon controls in the forms .Designer.vb file).
link|flag
The question is... would you use a control written by Poo? – Will Aug 18 at 18:42
My problem lies with language, I am coding in vb.net, not c#. I have encountered this ribbon previously and have used it in c# projects, but now I need a .net one... – Cyclone Aug 18 at 18:48
The control itself is written in C#, but you can still use it (packaged in a DLL) in VB.net. – Jay Riggs Aug 18 at 18:51
How do I do so? Can you explain? Can I use it in Design View even with vb.net? – Cyclone Aug 18 at 18:52
1  
I tested and had many of the same problems you did. I edited my response with a fix that will hopefully work for you. – Jay Riggs Aug 19 at 19:48
show 13 more comments
vote up 1 vote down

I'd wager that DLL is for authoring plugins that interact with the ribbon. As far as I know, Office 2007's UI is not for you, or anybody outside of MS, to use in our own projects. Unlike the standard controls they ship with visual studio.

There is a WPF version available, however. I don't think we'll see a Windows Forms version from MS available for free.

link|flag
Darn. So that is not for using the ribbon itself? – Cyclone Aug 18 at 18:45
Nope. That ribbon is not yours. Cannot have. Not for you. – Will Aug 18 at 20:35
Darn lol. Sure wish I could ;) – Cyclone Aug 19 at 0:01
vote up 1 vote down

A quick googling turns out Ribbon UI Control Roundup for Developers , which should cover your needs.

link|flag
None of those are for vb.net :( – Cyclone Aug 18 at 18:50
vote up 0 vote down

Assuming that you downloaded the WPF Ribbon Preview from CodePlex you will find further documentation here:

A Ribbon Feature Walkthrough presents the features available within the WPF ribbon class library and this Hands-on-Lab will provide you with exercises to get started creating your own ribbon. The examples in these exercises are in C#, but maybe they are still helpful if you want to create your ribbon using VB.Net.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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