well finally i found the answer of my question .
i really didn't get the correct and the best answer from searching the internet and asking questions .
its all about resources , everything from outside used in a projection must go through these steps :
- imported/downloaded to project folder.
(it's really common to put the files to a Resource folder as a projection sub-folder)
- defined/submitted/converted to a local or global projection's
.resx
file.
(.resx
file is a XML)
- get a handle from C#.net to be accessible .
(from .resx
designer file)
(this is done by defining - usually as a property - in the global or local C#.net .resx
designer)
if we assume local .resx
as a personal backpack for classes and projection(global) .resx
file as a public drawer , every classes provide their resources from their own backpack and the public drawer . by conventional direct procedure of providing resources , Visual Studio IDE don't let the classes use other classes resources . but if you go a little further into .resx
files and the designer files this would be possible .
first let me explain how a class can use other classes resources .
when you import files into a local .resx
a hard encoded copy of the files imported into the XML of the .resx
. you can access XML of the local .resx
file if you open the .resx
file with a XML-editor .
for example if you imported an icon file into a form
you will see these codes in the XML related to the icon :
(to access the XML-editor in VS just easily right-click the .resx
file and click open with then choose XML-editor)
<data name="$this.Icon" type="System.Drawing.Icon, System.Drawing"
mimetype="application/x-microsoft.net.object.bytearray.base64">
<value>
AAABAAkAMDAAAAEACACoDgAAlgAAACAgAAABAAgAqAgAAEAPAAAYGAAAAQAIAMgGAAD
oFwAAEBAAAAEACABoBQAAsB4AAAAAAAABACAA510BABgkAAAwMAAAAQAgAKglAAAAggEAICAA
AAEAIACoEAAAqKcBABgYAAABACAAiAkAAFC4AQAQEAAAAQAgAGgEAADYwQEAKAAAADAAAABgAAA
AAQAIAAAAAAAACQAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAQAAAAEAAAAAAAAZHBQAHR4ZABgkFAAaKRYAHyAaAB0rGQ
AeMBkAIiQcACQpHgAiNBwAJDkeACUn
.
.
.
+Pn5D/j5+Q/4+fkP+Pn5D/j5+Q/4+fkP+Pn5D/j5+Q/4+fk
P+Pn5D/j5+Q/4+fkPAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAP//AAD//wAA4AMAAAABA
AAAAAAAAAEAAAADAAAAAwAAAAMAAAADAAAAAwAAAAMAAAADAAAAAwAA
</value>
</data>
the file encoded , you can see VS gives it a name ($this.Icon) and specify its type and mimetype there . so these property's now is changeable
for accessing resources in designer or constructor files an object of System.Resources.ResourceManager
must be created .
the constructor of ResourceManager
has two overload , one of them just use resourceSource
type as the input parameter . it has to be the resource type of the host of resources . one can get it like this :
typeof(Form1) ;
so creating a ResourceManager
object :
System.Resources.ResourceManager resource = new System.Resources.ResourceManager(typeof(Form1))
the object resource
now has a GetObject()
method to access .resx
imported files by their name , for example for the icon :
((System.Drawing.Icon)(resources.GetObject("$this.Icon")))
if you open the designer file of the form you can see the codes for the icon of the form :
this.Icon = ((System.Drawing.Icon)(resources.GetObject("$this.Icon")));
resource
is a ResourceManager
object created in the base form class by the IDE so you can use it here in the designer file easily .
if you want to use for example the icon of form1 in form2 you can refer to it like this :
this.AutoScaleDimensions = new System.Drawing.SizeF(6F, 13F);
this.AutoScaleMode = System.Windows.Forms.AutoScaleMode.Font;
this.ClientSize = new System.Drawing.Size(284, 262);
**this.Icon = (System.Drawing.Icon)((new System.Resources.ResourceManager(typeof(Form1))).GetObject("$this.Icon"));***
this.Name = "Form2";
this.Text = "Form2";
this.ResumeLayout(false);
(look carefully the line started with **)
maybe its better to defined it as a public static property in the form constructor to avoid too much typing of nestings :
public static System.Drawing.Icon icon
{
get
{
return (System.Drawing.Icon)((new System.Resources.ResourceManager(typeof(Form1))).GetObject("$this.Icon"));
}
}
so in the form2 designer :
this.Icon = Form1.icon ;
so far using resources of other classes revealed now lets talk about defining and using global projections resources manually !
there's no hard-copy of the imported files in a global .resx
file . there's just a reference to it .
for example you imported icon with the IDE , it creates a Resource sub-folder and put the file in it .
now if you open properties in the solution manager and open the Resource.resx with a XML editor (Right-Click > Open With > XML editor) you can see this code :
<assembly alias="System.Windows.Forms" name="System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089" />
<data name="PerfCenterCpl" type="System.Resources.ResXFileRef, System.Windows.Forms">
<value>..\Resources\icon.ico;System.Drawing.Icon, System.Drawing, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b03f5f7f11d50a3a</value>
</data>
you can see above in the value it specified its reference address and its type and even its type version ! and its culture type and really interesting it has a key !
from its address , it seems files just added to projection for integrity . global resources can be every where in the projection folder , in the computer , in the network or in the internet !
it has a unique key ! seems we can access resources by their key in the project too !
now its time for resource to gets its handle
if you open Resource.resx in the solution manager and open the Resource Designer you can see it gets its handle by a property :
internal static System.Drawing.Icon icon {
get {
object obj = ResourceManager.GetObject("icon", resourceCulture);
return ((System.Drawing.Icon)(obj));
}
}
so the resource is accessible with Properties.Resources.icon
and doesnt need any type casting :
this.Icon = Properties.Resources.icon ;
now if further processes on the resources needed , global resources can be a method accepting input parameters !
in my problem i give the resource a handle but there isn't any resource reference in the XML
partial
classes were invented, so we never have to touch designer files. Discouraging someone from doing exactly what the comments of the file recommend you never do seems like good advice to me.