How My Depends on Project Type

My exposes only those objects required by a particular project type. For example, the My.Forms object is available in a Windows Forms application but not available in a console application. This topic describes which My objects are available in different project types.

My in Windows Applications and Web Sites

My exposes only objects that are useful in the current project type; it suppresses objects that are not applicable. For example, the following image shows the My object model in a Windows Forms project.

Shape of My in a Windows Forms application

In a Web site project, My exposes objects that are relevant to a Web developer (such as the My.Request and My.Response objects) while suppressing objects that are not relevant (such as the My.Forms object). The following image shows the My object model in a Web site project:

Shape of My in a Web application

Project Details

The following table shows which My objects are enabled by default for eight project types: Windows application, class Library, console application, Windows control library, Web control library, Windows service, empty, and Web site.

There are three versions of the My.Application object, two versions of the My.Computer object, and two versions of My.User object; details about these versions are given in the footnotes after the table.

My Object

Windows Application

Class Library

Console Application

Windows Control Library

Web Control Library

Windows Service

Empty

Web Site

My.Application

Yes1

Yes2

Yes3

Yes2

No

Yes3

No

No

My.Computer

Yes4

Yes4

Yes4

Yes4

Yes5

Yes4

No

Yes5

My.Forms

Yes

No

No

Yes

No

No

No

No

My.Log

No

No

No

No

No

No

No

Yes

My.Request

No

No

No

No

No

No

No

Yes

My.Resources

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

No

No

My.Response

No

No

No

No

No

No

No

Yes

My.Settings

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

No

No

My.User

Yes6

Yes6

Yes6

Yes6

Yes7

Yes6

No

Yes7

My.WebServices

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

No

No

1 Windows Forms version of My.Application. Derives from the console version (see Note 3); adds support for interacting with the application's windows and provides the Visual Basic Application model.

2 Library version of My.Application. Provides the basic functionality needed by an application: provides members for writing to the application log and accessing application information.

3 Console version of My.Application. Derives from the library version (see Note 2), and adds additional members for accessing the application's command-line arguments and ClickOnce deployment information.

4 Windows version of My.Computer. Derives from the Server version (see Note 5), and provides access to useful objects on a client machine, such as the keyboard, screen, and mouse.

5 Server version of My.Computer. Provides basic information about the computer, such as the name, access to the clock, and so on.

6 Windows version of My.User. This object is associated with the thread's current identity.

7 Web version of My.User. This object is associated with the user identity of the application's current HTTP request.

See Also

Concepts

Customizing Which Objects are Available in My

Conditional Compilation Overview

Reference

/define (Visual Basic)

My.Application Object

My.Computer Object

My.Forms Object

My.Log Object

My.Request Object

My.Response Object

My.User Object

My.WebServices Object