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Posted to microsoft.public.office.setup,microsoft.public.vstudio.general,microsoft.public.dotnet.general,microsoft.public.dotnet.framework.interop,microsoft.public.excel.misc
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Doing a change from ARP for Office won't do much - it will offer you a viiew
of the installed features in a treeview. You can see the .NET Programmability choice, and cancel out without doing anything. I generally trust Microsoft product installations - from my experience they're fine - but you're right, setups often don't get the attention they deserve and are thrown togetherin a rush at the end of the development cycle. -- Phil Wilson Definitive Guide to Windows Installer http://www.apress.com/book/view/1590592972 "John Brock" wrote in message ... Thanks for the quick response! I already figured out my problem -- it turns out you need to explicitly add a reference to Excel to the project (using Project - Add Reference); it doesn't just happen automatically. In the corporate environment there are people who do this sort of thing up for you, so you don't see everything that is involved! I am wary of playing with Add/Remove Programs, because my usual experience is that when you click on a button a program goes away. Are you saying I should hit the Change button for the Microsoft Office Professional 2007 entry, and find out what's underneath it? I tried doing that on a Limited account (to be safe) and the Office Setup program came up, which scared me, so I canceled. But it would be good to be able to explore programs and see which components are installed, if it can be done safely. BTW, your book looks interesting. I am in the market for such a book, so it's now on my short list! In article , Phil Wilson wrote: Each feature in Office 2007 (Excel, Outlook etc) has a sub-feature called .NET Programmability Support. Go to Add/Remove Programs and modify the installed features to add the ones you need, plus that will tell you if they are already installed or not (and whether VS 2008 cuts it or not). -- Phil Wilson Definitive Guide to Windows Installer http://www.apress.com/book/view/1590592972 "John Brock" wrote in message ... I may have botched an install of Office Professional 2007, or I may have a different problem. I hope someone will be able to tell me which, and if the problem was the install, give me some advice about reinstalling and getting it right. What I want to do is use Visual Studio to write a VB.NET app that reads and writes Excel workbooks. I have already done this in a corporate setting (using VS 2005 Team Edition), but now I need to do it on my home computer. In the corporate setting, if I wanted the code in a module or class to be able to access Excel, I inserted the following statement at the beginning of the file: Imports Excel = Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel This didn't work at home, where I was using Excel 2002 and Visual Studio 2008 Express. With a little research I found I needed these things called PIAs (Primary Interop Assemblies), that came with Office 2003 and 2007, but were not installed by default: Office 2003 and later versions of Office include PIAs with the Office Setup program. The Office PIAs may be installed with the Office Setup program provided that your computer has the .NET Framework 1.1 or a later version of the .NET Framework already installed. You can distribute the Office PIAs by using the Microsoft Office Primary Interop Assemblies (PIAs) redistributable. http://support.microsoft.com/kb/840585 So I bought a copy of Office Professional 2007 (I was overdue anyway) and installed it, but the VB statement above still gives me an error message saying that: Namespace or type specified in the Imports 'Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel' doesn't contain any public member or cannot be found. I see two possibilities: 1) VS 2008 Express just doesn't cut it. I know that with VS 2008 Professional you get something called Visual Studio Tools for Office, but I was under the impression that having the PIAs installed was enough to get you connected to Excel, and that all VSTO added was a bunch of templates and tools that made Office programming easier. But perhaps I was wrong, and VS 2008 Express is not capable of using the PIAs? I can get a copy of VS 2008 Professional, but I would rather use Express if possible. And in any case I am not certain that is the problem. The other possibility is: 2) There were two CDs in the Office Professional 2007 box, but only one was used in the installation process. So what is on Disc 2, and why wasn't it asked for? I'm concerned because I tried to do a custom install that would install *everything*, including the PIAs, but the procedure was kind of confusing. I was given a tree with the various Office components, and a bunch of dropdown choices, in particular "Run from My Computer" and "Run All from My Computer". (This is from memory, so I may be a bit off). The installation help said that if you chose "Run All" then all the subcomponents would also be installed, so I checked that at the highest level (Office), and the boxes for all the subcomponents turned white (some had been gray), and by my reading of the help this is what I wanted. But perhaps I did a minimum install, rather than a maximum? So it would be very very helpful to know: 2a) How can I find out if the PIAs in fact were installed? 2b) If I need to do a reinstall, how do I make sure I get it right this time? Thanks in advance for any help you can give me! -- John Brock -- John Brock |
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