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I have a C# class library and also have a powerbuilder application. I want to expose the c# class and use it in the powerbuilder application. I used the following blogs to expose the functions so it can be accessed by powerbuilder application https://whoisburiedhere.wordpress.com/2011/07/12/creating-a-com-object-from-scratch-with-c/ http://jumbloid.blogspot.com/2009/12/making-net-dll-com-visible.html

So i exposed the COM and made it accessible in powerbuilder but i still have some fundamental questions to make sure if i follow the best guidelines. The class looks before converting to COM looks like

 class classname
 {
    function1(){//do something}
    function2(){//do something}
    function3(){//do something}
    function4(){//do something}
 }  

To convert to COM I created an interface and i wanted to expose only function1 and function2. So i modified the class as

[ComVisible(true)]
[Guid("03S3233DS-EBS2-5574-825F-EERSDG8999"),InterfaceType(ComInterfaceType.InterfaceIsDual)]
interface Iinterface
{
  function1();
  function2();
}

In the main class i made the following modifications 1. I set the COM visible property to false in AssemblyInfo as i do not want to expose all the public methods. 2. Class looks like

[ComVisible(true)]
[Guid("2FD1574DS4-3FEA-455e-EW60A-EC1DFS54542D"), ClassInterface(ClassInterfaceType.None)]
class class1 : Iinterface
{
    function1(){//do something}
    function2(){//do something}
    [ComVisible(false)] //i don't want the mehtod to be exposed
    function3(){//do something}
    [ComVisible(false)]
    function4(){//do something}
}

I have the following questions for me to understand better 1. Do i explicitly set the COM visible property to false for the methods that i do not want to expose if i set the visible property of class to true and the default COM visible property (in assemblyinfo) to false? My understanding is i will only have functions that i want to expose in interface, so irrespective of the visible property, if i dont have the function in interface then it won't be visible? I did understand how to deploy using regasm in client computer by copying the dll and use regasm.exe, my question is how to deploy in non development machines with no .NET installed?

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    I don't think you can deploy to a machine with no .NET. Even exposed to COM, its still a .NET assembly and requires the framework to be installed so that the runtime can load and execute the assembly.
    – Ron Beyer
    Apr 21, 2015 at 21:25
  • Perhaps the op meant with no Visual Studio or Windows SDK installed.
    – acelent
    Apr 22, 2015 at 9:42

1 Answer 1

6
 [ClassInterface(ClassInterfaceType.None)]

That means that none of the class implementation details are visible, the proper and pure COM way. So it is not necessary to apply [ComVisible(false)] on methods you don't want to expose. Only the Iinterface methods are visible.

Using, say, ClassInterfaceType.AutoDual is a convenience in .NET, the CLR will synthesize an interface automatically. It matches the behavior of old versions of Visual Basic (VBA, VB6), they did not support interfaces yet. It does however expose too much, the methods inherited from System.Object (like GetHashCode etc) will be visible as well without a decent way to hide them. You also get a dependency on the mscorlib.tlb type library. So declaring the interface explicitly like you did is the certainly better way.

The target machine must have .NET installed, rock-hard requirement.

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  • Thanks that explains my questions.. So what would be the best way to deploy dll to the client machines ? I read that one of the ways is to copy dll to other machines and use regasm.exe and point the dll to register dll in client machines.. Is this the best way to do it?
    – Pete sam
    Apr 22, 2015 at 11:36
  • Using Regasm is not a "best way" by a stretch, COM servers ought to have an installer so they are dead-simple to deploy. Pretty easy to create one with, say, this VS add-on. Apr 22, 2015 at 11:46

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