February, 2008 - Anything's Possible - Site Home - MSDN Blogs
Sign In
Anything's Possible
Ever heard a developer say "it can't be done?" It is one of my biggest pet peeves. The truth is, it can be done. If you approach a problem pragmatically and put enough effort into it, understanding the root issues, and not settling for sub-pa
Translate This Page
Translate this page
Powered by
Microsoft® Translator
Options
Email Blog Author
RSS for posts
Atom
RSS for comments
OK
Search
Advanced search options...
Search In:
Everything
Blogs
Forums
People
Groups
Places
Pages
Date range:
All Time
Last Year
Last 6 Months
Last 3 Months
Last Month
Last Week
Last Two Days
Tags
.NET
C#
Drag and Drop
IDataObject
IDragSourceHelper
IDropTargetHelper
Interop
MSBuild
Pages
PROPVARIANT
Source Server
Symbol Server
Team Foundation Server
Team Test
Unit Testing
Visual Studio
VSTT
Archive
Archives
December 2009
(1)
June 2009
(3)
February 2009
(1)
April 2008
(3)
February 2008
(8)
February, 2008
MSDN Blogs
>
Anything's Possible
>
February, 2008
Posts
Subscribe via RSS
Sort by:
Most Recent
|
Most Views
|
Most Comments
Excerpt View
|
Full Post View
Anything's Possible
Shell Style Drag and Drop in .NET - Part 3
Posted
over 4 years ago
by
adamroot
0
Comments
In Part 1, Shell Style Drag and Drop in .NET (WPF and WinForms) , I opened up the discussion about implementing a nice Shell style drag image, like that of Windows Explorer, in C#. This involved exposing a couple of COM interfaces to .NET, as well as...
Anything's Possible
Shell Style Drag and Drop in .NET - Part 2
Posted
over 4 years ago
by
adamroot
4
Comments
Last week, in Shell Style Drag and Drop in .NET (WPF and WinForms) , I looked at hooking up the COM interfaces necessary to implement drag images using the Windows Shell. This week, I'm going to introduce some .NET 3.5 extensions (which can be easily...
Anything's Possible
Shell Style Drag and Drop in .NET (WPF and WinForms)
Posted
over 4 years ago
by
adamroot
0
Comments
If you've worked with .NET drag and drop, you may have noticed that the pretty images that Windows Explorer paints while dragging items does not come for free. In fact, by default, .NET will give you a rather ugly black and white cursor with the drag...
Page 1 of 1 (3 items)