Hiding Opened Excel File
here is my question:
I have developed a program that uses Microsoft.Ex开发者_如何学Pythoncel COM components in order to read/write over Excel files. Well, my app is doing good but when I open, for instance, another file directly with Excel while my program is running, the file(s) that my app uses appear within Excel. I do not want this. I tried also the Visibility property of Excel Application class, but that was not the solution, it just does not work.
NOTE : I have checked this question out.
Restrict access to excel file opened by C# program
Yet, it says no proper solution actually.
You can use Application.IgnoreRemoteRequests = true
. This will avoid users opening excel files in the same Excel
process as the one you are using.
There is one caveat though: you have to make sure that all execution paths of your application reset this property to false
. This property WILL NOT reset itself when you quit and release your Excel
application which means that Excel
will not respond correctly to a subsequent user who double clicks on a *.xls file for example.
EDIT: Possible issues with IgnoreRemoteRequest
Ok, to make this clearer I'll detail a little bit more what issues you can run into using this feature (at least these are the only ones I've run into when I had to use this feature).
When setting IgnoreRemoteRequests = true
you have to make sure you reset this property BEFORE quiting and/or releasing the COM Excel application. If you don't, Excel will not respond to DDE requests which means if someone double clicks on a *.xls file, the file will not open (Excel will start up, but it wont open the file automatically).
This however is only true if you quit the application and/or release it without reseting the property. You just have to make sure that wherever it is in your code that you are quitting/resetting you set the IgnoreRemoteRquests
back to false
before.
If you'r application crashes and it hasn't been able to clean up (unhandled exception) then the EXCEL process will keep running (if invisible, you will only see it in the Task Manager). That is normal as your app didnt have a chance to quit and release the internal Excel it is using. This however is not an issue. If a user ignores this "leaked" Excel process until it's eventually killed in next reboot or whatever, or manually kills it from the task bar, Excel will work perfectly fine.
Note: MS Excel 2007. Don't know about behavior of previous versions.
Have you tried running your program under a service account? This should avoid the excel com object interfering with the instance used by the logged in console user, so they will not see the effects of your com objects. It's probably also better security practice to run COM type applications under a service account instead of a user account as well, but that's for another question.
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