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The Question

My question is: Does C# nativly support late-binding IDispatch?


Pretend i'm trying to automate Office, while being compatible with whatever version the customer has installed.

In the .NET world if you developed with Office 2000 installed, every developer, and every customer, from now until the end of time, is required to have Office 2000.

In the world before .NET, we used COM to talk to Office applications.

For example:

1) Use the version independant ProgID

"Excel.Application"

which resolves to:

clsid = {00024500-0000-0000-C000-000000000046}

and then using COM, we ask for one of these classes to be instantiated into an object:

IUnknown unk;
CoCreateInstance(
    clsid, 
    null,
    CLSCTX_INPROC_SERVER | CLSCTX_LOCAL_SERVER,
    IUnknown, 
    out unk);

And now we're off to the races - able to use Excel from inside my application. Of course, if really you want to use the object, you have to call have some way of calling methods.

We could get ahold of the various interface declarations, translated into our language. This technique is good because we get

  • early binding
  • code-insight
  • compile type syntax checking

and some example code might be:

Application xl = (IExcelApplication)unk;
ExcelWorkbook workbook = xl.Workbooks.Add(template, lcid);
Worksheet worksheet = workbook.ActiveSheet;


But there is a downside of using interfaces: we have to get ahold of the various interface declarations, transated into our language. And we're stuck using method-based invocations, having to specify all parameters, e.g.:

ExcelWorkbook workbook = xl.Workbooks.Add(template, lcid);
xl.Worksheets.Add(before, after, count, type, lcid);

This has proved, in the real world, to have such downsides that we would willingly give up:

  • early binding
  • code-insight
  • compile time syntax checking

and instead use IDispatch late binding:

Variant xl = (IDispatch)unk;
Variant newWorksheet = xl.Worksheets.Add();

Because Excel automation was designed for VB Script, a lot of parameters can be ommitted, even when there is no overload without them.

Note: Don't confuse my example of Excel with a reason of why i want to use IDispatch. Not every COM object is Excel. Some COM objects have no support other than through IDispatch.

show/hide this revision's text 3 added 144 characters in body; edited tags


The Question

My question is: Does C# nativly support late-binding IDispatch?


Pretend i'm trying to automate Office, and while being compatible with whatever version the customer has installed.

In the .NET world if you developed with Office 2000 installed, every developer, and every customer, from now until the end of time, is required to have Office 2000.

In the world before .NET, we used COM to talk to Office applications.

For example:

1) Use the version independant ProgID

"Excel.Application"

which resolves to:

clsid = {00024500-0000-0000-C000-000000000046}

And

and then using COM, we ask for one of these classes to be instantiated into an object:

IUnknown unk;
CoCreateInstance(
    clsid, 
    null,
    CLSCTX_INPROC_SERVER | CLSCTX_LOCAL_SERVER,
    IUnknown, 
    out unk);

And now we're off to the races - using able to use Excel from inside my application. Of course, if really you want to use the object, you have to call have some way of calling methods.

We could get ahold of the various interface declarations, translated into our language. This technique is good because we get

  • early binding
  • code-insight
  • compile type syntax checking

and some example code would might be:

Application xl = (IExcelApplication)unk;
ExcelWorkbook workbook = xl.Workbooks.Add(template, lcid);
Worksheet worksheet = workbook.ActiveSheet;

On the


But there is a downside of using interfaces: we have to get ahold of the various interface declarations, transated into our language, and . And we're stuck using method based method-based invocations, specifying having to specify all parameters, e.g.:

ExcelWorkbook workbook = xl.Workbooks.Add(template, lcid);
xl.Worksheets.Add(before, after, count, type, lcid);

This has proved, in the real world, to have such downsides that we prefer to forgoe willingly give up:

  • early binding
  • code-insight
  • compile time syntax checking

and instead use IDispatch late binding:

Variant xl = (IDispatch)unk;
Variant newWorksheet = xl.Worksheets.Add();

Because Excel automation was designed for VB Script, a lot of parameters can be ommitted, even when there is no overload without them.


The Question

My question is: Does C# nativly support late-binding IDispatch?

Note: Don't confuse my example of Excel with a reason of why i want to use IDispatch. Not every COM object is Excel. Some COM objects have no support other than through IDispatch.

show/hide this revision's text 2 added 113 characters in body

i'm trying to automate Office, and being compatible with whatever version the customer has installed.

In the .NET world if you developed with Office 2000 installed, every developer and every customer, from now until the end of time is required to have Office 2000.

In the world before .NET, we used COM to talk to Office applications.

For example:

1) Use the version independant ProgID

"Excel.Application"

which resolves to:

clsid = {00024500-0000-0000-C000-000000000046}

And then using COM, we ask for one of these classes to be instantiated into an object:

IUnknown unk;
CoCreateInstance(
    clsid, 
    null,
    CLSCTX_INPROC_SERVER | CLSCTX_LOCAL_SERVER,
    IUnknown, 
    out unk);

And now we're off to the races - using Excel from inside my application. Of course, if you want to use the object, you have to call methods.

We could get ahold of the various interface declarations translated into our language. This is good because we get

  • early binding
  • code-insight
  • compile type syntax checking

and some code would be:

Application xl = (IExcelApplication)unk;
ExcelWorkbook workbook = xl.Workbooks.Add(template, lcid);
Worksheet worksheet = workbook.ActiveSheet;

On the downside: we have to get ahold of the various interface declarations transated into our language, and we're stuck using method based invocations, specifying all parameters. , e.g.:

ExcelWorkbook workbook = xl.Workbooks.Add(template, lcid);
xl.Worksheets.Add(before, after, count, type, lcid);

This has proved, in the real world, to have such downsides that we prefer to forgoe

  • early binding
  • code-insight
  • compile time syntax checking

and instead use IDispatch late binding:

Variant xl = (IDispatch)unk; Variant newWorksheet = xl.Worksheets.Add();

Because Excel automation was designed for VB Script, a lot of parameters can be ommitted, even when there is no overload without them.


The Question

My question is: Does C# nativly support late-binding IDispatch?

Note: Don't confuse my example of Excel with a reason of why i want to use IDispatch. Not every COM object is Excel. Some COM objects have no support other than through IDispatch.

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