zoukankan      html  css  js  c++  java
  • Silverlight Hosted in Winforms

    I think using the Windows Forms WebBrowser control is your best bet. To do this, you'll need your Silverlight app on a webpage, then you point your WebBrowser at the page's URI.

    To keep your WebBrowser control from acting like IE, I'd recommend setting the following:

    webBrowser.AllowNavigation = false;
    webBrowser
    .AllowWebBrowserDrop = false;
    webBrowser
    .IsWebBrowserContextMenuEnabled = false;
    webBrowser
    .WebBrowserShortcutsEnabled = false;

    Calling methods on your form from within Silverlight is easy enough to do. To start, you need a class that has all the methods you want to call from Silverlight. You can use your form itself or another object, but you need to mark the class with the [ComVisible(true)] attribute. Then you assign your object to the WebBrowser.ObjectForScripting property. This exposes your object as "window.external" on the webpage.

    [ComVisible(true)]
    public partial class Form1 : Form
    {
       
    ......
        webBrowser
    .ObjectForScripting = this;
       
    ......
       
    public void CallMeInForm(string something)
       
    {
           
    MessageBox.Show("Silverlight said: " + something);
       
    }
    }

    That's it for inside your Windows Forms project. Inside of your Silverlight app, you need to pick up this ObjectForScripting and invoke methods on it. To call the method in my example above, use the following lines:

    using System.Windows.Browser;
    ......
    ScriptObject myForm = (ScriptObject)HtmlPage.Window.GetProperty("external");
    myForm
    .Invoke("CallMeInForm", "testing 1 2 3");

    The Invoke command lets you pass any number and type of parameters to your function, although I suspect it wouldn't like it very much if you try passing complex datatypes around. But if you needed to do so, you could always use serialization.

    Calling Silverlight functions from your form seems to be the tricker direction. I haven't figured this one out completely yet.

    In your Silverlight app, you also expose functions to the webpage. To do this, use the HtmlPage.RegisterScriptableObject() function. Again, you can pass in any class with methods you want to expose. For a method to be exposed, though, you have to mark it with the [ScriptableMember] attribute.

    HtmlPage.RegisterScriptableObject("Page", this);
    ......
    [ScriptableMember]
    public void CallMeInSilverlight(string message)
    {
       
    HtmlPage.Window.Alert("The form said: " + message);
    }

    At this point, your method is exposed to JavaScript on the page. Unfortunately, I have not yet been able to get the WebBrowser control to actually call the method. Once I figure out a good way to do that, I'll come back and finish this example.

  • 相关阅读:
    在阿里云服务器(ECS)上从零开始搭建nginx服务器
    HTML5和CSS3新特性一览
    【react】---手动封装一个简易版的redux
    【react】---17新增的生命周期
    vue单页面应用刷新网页后vuex的state数据丢失的解决方案
    [VUE]object.defineProperty的基本使用
    JavaScript / 本地存储
    转载--httpclient原理和应用
    关于mybatis mapper.xml中的if判断
    idea maven install时,打包找不到微服务common中公用的包
  • 原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/sofire/p/1924386.html
Copyright © 2011-2022 走看看