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291163: How to Create a COM Add-in for Outlook 2002

 
 
Stephen \(StudioTwo\)
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      4th Aug 2004
Hello,
I have written a form using outlook 2002 vba.
It would be nice to learn how to deploy this within the office as a com
addin.
To this end, Microsoft have posted the following document:
http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=291163#Need

What You Need to Create a COM Add-in
=============================
In addition to Outlook, you need one of the following development
environments to create a COM add-in for Office or Outlook:
1] Visual Basic 5.0 or later (Visual Basic 6.0 is preferred)
2] Microsoft Office Developer, which includes the ability to compile a
Visual Basic for Applications project into a Dynamic Link Library (DLL)
3] Any other COM-compliant development environment, such as Microsoft Visual
C++ or Microsoft Visual J++

Looking through some old postings within this newsgroup, I assume the above
should read "Visual Basic 5.0 *Professional* or later".
I was all set to purchase vb .net standard edition for £80. But am I correct
in thinking I will have to spend nearer £900 (VB Studio) in order to acheive
this task?
If so, that's way above my budget for such a little taster project.

TIA
Stephen


 
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Jeff Johnson [MVP: VB]
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      4th Aug 2004

"Stephen (StudioTwo)" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:O8Xc$(E-Mail Removed)...

> I have written a form using outlook 2002 vba.
> It would be nice to learn how to deploy this within the office as a com
> addin.
> To this end, Microsoft have posted the following document:
> http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=291163#Need
>
> What You Need to Create a COM Add-in
> =============================
> In addition to Outlook, you need one of the following development
> environments to create a COM add-in for Office or Outlook:
> 1] Visual Basic 5.0 or later (Visual Basic 6.0 is preferred)
> 2] Microsoft Office Developer, which includes the ability to compile a
> Visual Basic for Applications project into a Dynamic Link Library (DLL)
> 3] Any other COM-compliant development environment, such as Microsoft

Visual
> C++ or Microsoft Visual J++
>
> Looking through some old postings within this newsgroup, I assume the

above
> should read "Visual Basic 5.0 *Professional* or later".
> I was all set to purchase vb .net standard edition for £80. But am I

correct
> in thinking I will have to spend nearer £900 (VB Studio) in order to

acheive
> this task?
> If so, that's way above my budget for such a little taster project.


I'm not an interop expert, but I don't believe that .NET-based languages can
create standalone COM servers. Item 1) may therefore actually need to read
"Visual Basic 5.0 or 6.0" as opposed to "or later."


 
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