vote up 13 vote down star
7

Is there anyway to use C# to build a container app where each tab is actually its own process like with Google chrome.

flag

6 Answers

vote up 10 vote down check

You can use the SetParent Win32 call to do this, but it's really fraught with problems. I had enough troubles getting it all to work nicely using windows from different AppDomains - there'd be even more difficulties with whole extra processes.

Basically there's potentially a lot of communication required between the two processes - things like resizing can become quite painful, as well as what happens if the child app wants to quit etc. It's all doable, but I'd think very carefully before doing it. For a browser it makes a lot of sense (disclaimer: I work for Google) but for most other apps it's really not worth the effort.

(Are the "tabs" you want to create actual .NET apps? If so, as I say this becomes significantly easier - and I can give you a big hint which is that each UI should run its own UI thread from within its own AppDomain. You get really weird effects if you don't do this!)

link|flag
Downvoters: Please give reasons. – Jon Skeet May 2 at 22:28
Your SetWindow link points to a SetParent function. (I did not downvote this, though) – luiscubal Sep 9 at 13:58
Oops, thanks - right link, wrong name. – Jon Skeet Sep 9 at 14:35
vote up 5 vote down

Check this post on the Chromium Blog. Only one process is responsible for the actual rendering to the screen.

link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

The System.AddIn APIs introduced in .NET 3.5 lets you use UI controls in separate AppDomains. With some hoop jumping, you can make it work in separate processes, too.

This is supported navtively in WPF. See the MSDN sample Add-In Returns a UI.

Using Windows Forms, it doesn't look like it's natively possible using the System.AddIn APIs. See this post from a System.AddIn architect Jack Gudenkauf.

However, there is a workaround for WinForms. You can make this work with a little hack: See the BCL team's blog Support for Windows Forms in System.AddIn Hosts and Add-ins

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Yes. You can spawn new processes using System.Diagnostics.Process. Using some form of Inter Process Communication, .Net Remoting for example, you can communicate between processes. And then you can set the parent of the window/form of your new process to a window (tab) of your first process so it appears there.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

My product, WindowTabs.com, kind of does this. You need to use Win32 - I suggest you avoid using SetParent because you end up attaching the thread input. Instead, draw the tabs above the windows and use SetWindowPos to move the windows as a group. Also, some third party controls like Infragistic don't function correctly if you parent the form at a Win32 level.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Without looking too deep into the extensibility stack, you can use the System.Addin namespace to build an application that inherently can create addins as visual individual tabs and set each tab/addin as an out process and this is a behavior out of the box.

It will have the same functionality as the chrome tabs.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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