I managed finally to reproduce the problem in Delphi XE (Update 1) on Win7 64 with Aero enabled. It seems that the size gets set wrong in the .DFM file, and because the Ribbon doesn't support manual resizing you can't visually fix it in the IDE (although it appears correctly at runtime) or in the Object Inspector. It occasionally appears correctly at runtime, but it seems that's sporadic as well.
It's a nasty bug, because it makes it impossible to design the Ribbon. You can add RibbonGroup items, and assign the ActionManager, and try and design it completely using the Structure Pane, but of course that's not a practical solution.
Fortunately, there's a pretty easy workaround, although it's annoying to have to do. :)
I managed twice to get the following workaround to function, but starting over it failed to work several times, so it's a possible way around it (no promises - worked in XE, consistently failed in XE2 Update 2):
- Right-click on the
Ribbon and add at least one tab.
- Right click on the form in the IDE, and choose
View as Text from the context (pop-up) menu.
- Find the
Ribbon control in the .dfm text, and change the Height from the 26 that the IDE assigned to 200. (The next step will adjust it, but that's fine - the 200 fixes the immediate problem.)
- Right-click again, and choose
View as Form, and the Ribbon should display correctly.
(I reported it in QC against XE2 Update 2, as the problem also exists there - QC #101642)
I traced it to TCustomRibbon.GetCaptionHeight, specifically
FCaptionHeight := Max(GetSystemMetrics(SM_CYCAPTION), 26);
It seems like the GetSystemMetrics call is returning something less than 26 on certain Win7 configurations (although I can't figure out why yet). There are a couple of commented lines in that method that seem to alter the result, but as I said they've been commented out.
The strange part is that in the TCustomRibbon.Create, the Height is set by a call to GetRibbonMetric(rmFullHeight), which sets the Result := cRibbonHeight + GetCaptionHeight;, and cRibbonHeight is a constant defined as cRibbonHeight = 117;.
Finally think I've tracked this down. In the declaration of TRibbon, there's a published property declaration:
published
...
property Height default TCustomRibbon.cRibbonHeight;
Because this is the default, it appears that any other value means that the call to GetRibbonMetric mentioned above doesn't happen (see the TCustomRibbon.Create mentioned above), and the strange result from the call to GetSystemMetric causes the erroneous value 26 to be saved as the 'other value`. Wierd; will update the QC in the AM.
Addendum: Updated QC report with additional details.