How to Integrate Excel in a Windows Form Application using the WebBrowser
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Introduction
With Automation, you are able to drive any Office application from your .NET application. This is really powerful. It may happen that one time, you would like to integrate such an application (Excel, for example) in your own application, and handle it like a control. A first approach has already been published on The Code Project (see the Background section in this article). The other method I will describe here uses the Microsoft
Background
You can study Anup Shinde's article . His method works fine. Instead of the
If you are interested in the original publication of the
Starting from scratch
Create a new form MyForm, and add a new
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Then create a function
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You can try and run your application, giving the filename an existing excel file path. You'll see that it works perfectly. Really easy, don't you think?
In fact, you will quickly get into trouble if you try to run the application a second time with the same Excel file. An error message tells you that your file is already in use. This may be strange because you think that you closed your application, and you did. So where is the problem?
Let's see what happened in the background. While the
Solving the problem step by step
Before further reading, you have to load the following Office COM library references for Office Automation : Microsoft Excel 11.0 Object Library Microsoft Office 11.0 Object Library
and use them in your file :
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You'll need these assemblies too :
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Declare these two Excel fields :
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Before trying to close the workbook, we need a handle on it. For convenience, the best moment to do this is just after the document has been loaded in the
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Then we define the
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Now we can write the code involved to close the background Excel application, while overriding the
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Using the code
You can use the code as written upper. Otherwise, it may be interesting to embed all the stuff in a .NET control. You'll be able to manage
Introduction
With Automation, you are able to drive any Office application from your .NET application. This is really powerful. It may happen that one time, you would like to integrate such an application (Excel, for example) in your own application, and handle it like a control. A first approach has already been published on The Code Project (see the Background section in this article). The other method I will describe here uses the Microsoft
WebBrowser
control as a host for the document. Background
You can study Anup Shinde's article . His method works fine. Instead of the
WebBrowser
control, it is based on Windows Win32 API. If you are interested in the original publication of the
WebBrowser
method, you can see the Microsoft KB . Starting from scratch
Create a new form MyForm, and add a new
WebBrowser
control, named webBrowser1
. Add the m_ExcelFileName
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// Contains the path to the workbook file private string m_ExcelFileName="test.xls"; // Replace here with an existing file
Then create a function
OpenFile
like this : Collapse
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public void OpenFile(string filename)
{
// Check the file exists if(!System.IO.File.Exists(filename)) throw new Exception();
m_ExcelFileName=filename;
// Load the workbook in the WebBrowser control this.webBrowser1.Navigate(filename,false);
}
You can try and run your application, giving the filename an existing excel file path. You'll see that it works perfectly. Really easy, don't you think?
In fact, you will quickly get into trouble if you try to run the application a second time with the same Excel file. An error message tells you that your file is already in use. This may be strange because you think that you closed your application, and you did. So where is the problem?
Let's see what happened in the background. While the
WebBrowser
was navigating, it opened an invisible Excel application, and loaded the workbook inside it. And when you closed your application, the WebBrowser
didn't close either its Excel application or the workbook. So we must do it, and this is the most difficult part of our job. Solving the problem step by step
Before further reading, you have to load the following Office COM library references for Office Automation :
and use them in your file :
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using Microsoft.Office.Core;
using Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel;
You'll need these assemblies too :
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using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
using System.Reflection;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices.ComTypes;
Declare these two Excel fields :
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// Contains a reference to the hosting application private Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel.Application m_XlApplication=null;
// Contains a reference to the active workbook private Workbook m_Workbook=null;
Before trying to close the workbook, we need a handle on it. For convenience, the best moment to do this is just after the document has been loaded in the
WebBrowser
. So we have to generate a webBrowser1_Navigated
event handler and its matching function, like this : Collapse
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private void webBrowser1_Navigated(object sender,WebBrowserNavigatedEventArgs e)
{
// Creation of the workbook object if((m_Workbook=RetrieveWorkbook(m_ExcelFileName))==null)return;
// Create the Excel.Application m_XlApplication=(Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel.Application)m_Workbook.Application;
}
Then we define the
RetrieveWorkbook
function. It is based on two imported Win32 API functions, that retrieve all the programs that are running on our computer. Our job is to search among them the one that is working with the workbook that names xlfile
. The code is like this : Collapse
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[DllImport("ole32.dll")] static extern int GetRunningObjectTable
(uint reserved,out IRunningObjectTable pprot);
[DllImport("ole32.dll")] static extern int CreateBindCtx(uint reserved,out IBindCtx pctx);
public Workbook RetrieveWorkbook(string xlfile)
{
IRunningObjectTable prot=null;
IEnumMoniker pmonkenum=null;
try
{
IntPtr pfetched=IntPtr.Zero;
// Query the running object table (ROT) if(GetRunningObjectTable(0,out prot)!=0||prot==null) return null;
prot.EnumRunning(out pmonkenum); pmonkenum.Reset();
IMoniker[] monikers=new IMoniker[1];
while(pmonkenum.Next(1,monikers,pfetched)==0)
{
IBindCtx pctx; string filepathname;
CreateBindCtx(0,out pctx);
// Get the name of the file monikers[0].GetDisplayName(pctx,null,out filepathname);
// Clean up Marshal.ReleaseComObject(pctx);
// Search for the workbook if(filepathname.IndexOf(xlfile)!=-1)
{
object roval;
// Get a handle on the workbook prot.GetObject(monikers[0],out roval);
return roval as Workbook;
}
}
}
catch
{
return null;
}
finally
{
// Clean up if(prot!=null) Marshal.ReleaseComObject(prot);
if(pmonkenum!=null) Marshal.ReleaseComObject(pmonkenum);
}
return null;
}
Now we can write the code involved to close the background Excel application, while overriding the
OnClose()
event : Collapse
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protected override void OnClosed(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
try
{
// Quit Excel and clean up. if(m_Workbook!=null)
{
m_Workbook.Close(true,Missing.Value,Missing.Value);
System.Runtime.InteropServices.Marshal.ReleaseComObject
(m_Workbook);
m_Workbook=null;
}
if(m_XlApplication!=null)
{
m_XlApplication.Quit();
System.Runtime.InteropServices.Marshal.ReleaseComObject
(m_XlApplication);
m_XlApplication=null;
System.GC.Collect();
}
}
catch
{
MessageBox.Show("Failed to close the application");
}
}
Using the code
You can use the code as written upper. Otherwise, it may be interesting to embed all the stuff in a .NET control. You'll be able to manage
CommandBars
, Menus
, etc. inside the control. You will find some code in the downloadable package section.