<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.1//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml11/DTD/xhtml11.dtd"><html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en"><head><title>Ookii.Dialogs</title><style type="text/css">body{font-family: Calibri, sans-serif;background: white;color: black;}a:link, a:visited, a:active{color: #00008B;}h1{font-weight: bold;font-size: xx-large;}h2{color: #00008B;font-weight: bold;font-style: italic;font-size: large;}h3{font-size: medium;}img{border: none;}.copyright{font-style: italic;}</style></head><body><h1>Ookii.Dialogs</h1><p class="copyright">Copyright © Sven Groot (Ookii.org) 2009, see license.txt for details</p><h2>Overview</h2><p>Ookii.Dialogs is a class library for .Net applications providing several common dialogs. Included are classes fortask dialogs, credential dialogs, progress dialogs, input dialogs, and common file dialogs.</p><p>This package contains two class libraries: Ookii.Dialogs.dll for use with Windows Forms, and Ookii.Dialogs.Wpf.dllfor use with Windows Presentation Foundation. The classes inside are pretty much identical; only the input dialogis not available for WPF. Some additional utility classes for Windows Forms are provided that are not available forWPF, see below for details.</p><p>Ookii.Dialogs requires the <a href="http://www.ookii.org/link.ashx?id=NetFramework35">Microsoft .Net Framework 3.5 SP1</a>.The included source code is intended for use in Visual Studio 2008.</p><p>The included sample applications Ookii.Dialogs.Sample.exe and Ookii.Dialogs.Sample.Wpf.exe demonstrate the dialogsfor Windows Forms and WPF respectively. View the source of these applications to see how to use the dialogs.</p><p>Full reference documentation for the class library is available in the <a href="Ookii.Dialogs.chm">included help file</a>.</p><h2>Included dialogs</h2><h3>Task dialog</h3><p><a href="http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb760441(VS.85).aspx">Task dialogs</a> are a new type of dialogfirst introduced in Windows Vista. They provide a superset of the message box functionality.</p><p><img src="images/taskdialog.png" alt="A task dialog" /></p><p>The Ookii.Dialogs.TaskDialog (for Windows Forms) and the Ookii.Dialogs.Wpf.TaskDialog (for WPF) classes provide accessto the task dialog functionality. The TaskDialog class inherits from System.ComponentModel.Component and offers fullsupport for the Windows Forms designer and component designer of Visual Studio 2008.</p><p>The TaskDialog class requires Windows Vista or a later version of Windows. Windows XP is not supported. Note that it issafe to instantiate the TaskDialog class and set any of its properties; only when the dialog is shown will a NotSupportedExceptionbe thrown on unsupported operating systems.</p><h3>Progress dialog</h3><p>Progress dialogs are a common dialog to show progress during operations that may take a long time. They are usedextensively in the Windows shell, and an API has been available since Windows 2000.</p><p><img src="images/progressdialog.png" alt="A progress dialog as it appears on Windows Vista and later" /></p><p>The Ookii.Dialogs.ProgressDialog (for Windows Forms) and the Ookii.Dialogs.Wpf.ProgressDialog (for WPF) classes providea wrapper for the Windows progress dialog API. The ProgressDialog class inherits from System.ComponentModel.Component and offers fullsupport for the Windows Forms designer and component designer of Visual Studio 2008. The ProgressDialog class resemblesthe System.ComponentModel.BackgroundWorker class and can be used in much the same way as that class.</p><p>The progress dialog's behaviour of the ShowDialog function is slightly different than that of other .Net dialogs; pleaseread the reference documentation for more information. It is recommended to use a non-modal dialog with the Show function.</p><p>The ProgressDialog class is supported on Windows XP and later versions of Windows. However, the progress dialog has a very differentappearance on Windows Vista and later (the image above shows the Vista version), so it is recommended to test on bothoperating systems to see if it appears to your satisfaction.</p><p>When using Windows 7, the ProgressDialog class automatically provides progress notification in the application's task barbutton.</p><h3>Credential dialog</h3><p>The Ookii.Dialogs.CredentialDialog (for Windows Forms) and the Ookii.Dialogs.Wpf.CredentialDialog (for WPF) classes providewrappers for the CredUI functionality first introduced in Windows XP. This class provides functionality for saving andretrieving generic credentials, as well as displaying the credential UI dialog. This class does not support all functionalityof CredUI; only generic credentials are supported, thing such as domain credentials or alternative authenticationproviders (e.g. smart cards or biometric devices) are not supported.</p><p><img src="images/credentialdialog.png" alt="A credential dialog as it appears on Windows Vista and later" /></p><p>The CredentialDialog class inherits from System.ComponentModel.Component and offers fullsupport for the Windows Forms designer and component designer of Visual Studio 2008.</p><p>On Windows XP, the CredentialDialog class will use the CredUIPromptForCredentials function to show the dialog;on Windows Vista and later, the CredUIPromptForWindowsCredentials function is used instead to show the new dialogintroduced with Windows Vista. Because of the difference in appearance in the two versions (the image above showsthe Vista version), it is recommended to test on both operating systems to see if it appears to your satisfaction.</p><h3>Input dialog</h3><p>The input dialog is a dialog that can be used to prompt the user for a single piece of text. Its functionalityis reminiscent of the Visual Basic InputBox function, only with a cleaner API and UI.</p><p><img src="images/inputdialog.png" alt="An input dialog as it appears on Windows Vista and later" /></p><p>The Ookii.Dialogs.InputDialog class provides the input dialog functionality for Windows Forms. This class is notavailable for WPF.</p><p>Unlike the other classes in this package, this class is not a wrapper for any existing API; the dialog usesa custom implementation in Windows Forms. This dialog is supported on Windows XP and later versions of windows;on Windows Vista and later, the visual styles API is used to draw the dialog to mimic the appearance of task dialogs,as shown in the image above.</p><p>The InputDialog class inherits from System.ComponentModel.Component and offers fullsupport for the Windows Forms designer and component designer of Visual Studio 2008.</p><h3>Vista-style common file dialogs</h3><p>Windows Vista introduced a new style of common file dialogs. As of .Net 3.5 SP1, the Windows Forms OpenFileDialog andSaveFileDialog class will automatically use the new style under most circumstances; however, some settings (suchas setting ShowReadOnly to true) still cause it to revert to the old dialog. The FolderBrowserDialog still uses theold style. In WPF, the Microsoft.Win32.OpenFileDialog and SaveFileDialog classes still use the old style dialogs,and a folder browser dialog is not provided at all.</p><p><img src="images/folderbrowserdialog.png" alt="The Vista-style folder browser dialog on Windows 7" /></p><p>The Ookii.Dialogs.VistaOpenFileDialog, Ookii.Dialogs.VistaSaveFileDialog and Ookii.Dialogs.VistaFolderBrowserDialogprovide these dialogs for Windows Forms (note that in the case of the OpenFileDialog and SaveFileDialog it isrecommended to use the built-in .Net classes unless you hit one of the scenarios where those classes use the olddialogs). The Ookii.Dialogs.Wpf.VistaOpenFileDialog, Ookii.Dialogs.Wpf.VistaSaveFileDialog and Ookii.Dialogs.Wpf.VistaFolderBrowserDialogclasses provide the same functionality for WPF.</p><p>The classes have been designed to resemble the original Windows Forms and WPF classes to make it easy to switch.When the classes are used on Windows XP, they will automatically fall back to the old style dialog; this is alsotrue for the VistaFolderBrowserDialog on WPF; that class provides a complete implementation of a folder browserdialog for WPF, old as well as new style.</p><p>The Vista-style file and folder dialogs classes for Windows Forms inherit from System.ComponentModel.Component and offer fullsupport for the Windows Forms designer and component designer of Visual Studio 2008.</p><h2>Additional functionality for Windows Forms</h2><p>Three additional classes are provided for Windows Forms only, in the Ookii.Dialogs library. These classes are used tosupport the InputDialog (with the exception of the Aero glass functionality, which the InputDialog does not use) butare made public for your convenience.</p><p>The AdditionalVisualStyleElements class provides some visual style elements used by task dialogs on Windows Vista and later.</p><p>The Glass class provides functionality for extending Aero glass into the client area of a window on Windows Vista and later,and for drawing text on a glass surface.</p><p>The ExtendedForm class serves as an alternative base class for forms, and provides functionality to automatically use thesystem font (e.g. Tahoma on XP and Segoe UI on Vista and later), and easy access to some of the functionality of the Glassclass.</p></body></html>