IOleCommandTarget::Exec method (docobj.h)
Executes the specified command or displays help for the command.
Syntax
HRESULT Exec(
[in] const GUID *pguidCmdGroup,
[in] DWORD nCmdID,
[in] DWORD nCmdexecopt,
[in] VARIANT *pvaIn,
[in, out] VARIANT *pvaOut
);
Parameters
[in] pguidCmdGroup
The unique identifier of the command group; can be NULL to specify the standard group.
[in] nCmdID
The command to be executed. This command must belong to the group specified with pguidCmdGroup.
[in] nCmdexecopt
Specifies how the object should execute the command. Possible values are taken from the OLECMDEXECOPT and OLECMDID_WINDOWSTATE_FLAG enumerations.
[in] pvaIn
A pointer to a VARIANTARG structure containing input arguments. This parameter can be NULL.
[in, out] pvaOut
Pointer to a VARIANTARG structure to receive command output. This parameter can be NULL.
Return value
This method returns S_OK on success. Other possible return values include the following.
Return code | Description |
---|---|
|
The pguidCmdGroup parameter is not NULL but does not specify a recognized command group. |
|
The nCmdID parameter is not a valid command in the group identified by pguidCmdGroup. |
|
The command identified by nCmdID is currently disabled and cannot be executed. |
|
The caller has asked for help on the command identified by nCmdID, but no help is available. |
|
The user canceled the execution of the command. |
Remarks
The list of input and output arguments of a command and how they are packaged is unique to each command. Such information should be documented with the specification of the command group. (See the description of OLECMDID_ZOOM in the OLECMDID enumeration.) In the absence of any specific information the command is assumed to take no arguments and have no return value.
Notes to Callers
The pguidCmdGroup and nCmdID parameters together uniquely identify the command to invoke. The nCmdExecOpt parameter specifies the exact action to be taken. (See the OLECMDEXECOPT enumeration for more details.)Most commands neither take arguments nor return values. For such commands, the caller can pass NULL in pvaIn and pvaOut. For commands that expect one or more input values, the caller can declare and initialize a VARIANTARG variable and pass a pointer to that variable in pvaIn. If the input to the command is a single value, the argument can be stored directly in the VARIANTARG structure and passed to the function. If the command expects multiple arguments, those arguments must be packaged appropriately within the VARIANTARG, using one of the supported types (such as IDispatch or SAFEARRAY).
If a command returns one or more arguments, the caller is expected to declare a VARIANTARG, initialize it to VT_EMPTY, and pass its address in pvaOut. If the command returns a single value, then the object can store that value directly in pvaOut. If the command has multiple output values, then it will package those in some way appropriate for the VARIANTARG.
Because pvaIn and pvOut are both caller-allocated, stack variables are permitted for both the caller and the object receiving the call. For commands that take zero or one argument on input and return zero or one value, no additional memory allocation is necessary. Most of the types supported by VARIANTARG do not require memory allocation. Exceptions include SAFEARRAY and BSTR.
Notes to Implementers
A command target must implement this function; E_NOTIMPL is not a valid return value.Requirements
Requirement | Value |
---|---|
Minimum supported client | Windows 2000 Professional [desktop apps only] |
Minimum supported server | Windows 2000 Server [desktop apps only] |
Target Platform | Windows |
Header | docobj.h |