This project presents you a small wrapper class around the Windows Forms 2.0 WebBrowser control control.
We do use this project inside several "real world" projects in our company, e.g. a Test Management tool and a Windows-based Content Management System (CMS).
The wrapper is no rocket science but provides some features I struggled with in the past. We use the control in several of our own (internal) applications.
Some of the features include:
- Enable the setting of text even when the control is not yet fully initialized.
- Allow pasting of images from the clipboard.
- Allows for resizing the images within the editor with the mouse
- Provide an alternative context menu for applying formatting options.
- Optionally directly edit the underlying HTML source code.
- Translated resources in English and German.
- Interface
IExternalInformationProviderfor externally persisting and restoring settings. - Provide standard CSS in the control; usually you do not need to define your own CSS.
To include the code in your own project, simply include the "ZetaHtmlEditControl.dll" assembly into your project.
Add the assembly to your Visual Studio .NET 2008 Windows Forms Designer Toolbox if you want to be able to drag the ExtendedWebBrowser control to your forms. Alternatively create and initialize an instance of the ExtendedWebBrowser control by code.
To put HTML from your code into the control, assign the HTML code to the ExtendedWebBrowser.DocumentText property. You do not have to pass a complete HTML document with HEAD and BODY tags but only the actual content that you would write inside the BODY tag.
To read out the HTML from the control, call the ExtendedWebBrowser.GetDocumentText( string folderPath ) method. The method takes one parameter "folderPath" that tells the control where to store newly passed images from the clipboard.
You need to have the <NetFx40_LegacySecurityPolicy enabled="true" /> switch inside your application's configuration file in order to use the control within .NET 4. E.g. something like that:
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<configuration>
<startup>
<supportedRuntime version="v4.0" sku=".NETFramework,Version=v4.0"/>
</startup>
<runtime>
<loadFromRemoteSources enabled="true" />
<NetFx40_LegacySecurityPolicy enabled="true" />
</runtime>
</configuration>
A more detailed article is available over on The Code Project.
