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Hierarchies in Visual Studio

Applies to: yesVisual Studio noVisual Studio for Mac

Note

This article applies to Visual Studio 2017. If you're looking for the latest Visual Studio documentation, see Visual Studio documentation. We recommend upgrading to the latest version of Visual Studio. Download it here

The Visual Studio integrated development environment (IDE) displays a project as a hierarchy. In the IDE, a hierarchy is a tree of nodes, where each node has a set of associated properties. A project hierarchy is a container that holds the project's items, the items' relationships, and the items' associated properties and commands.

In Visual Studio, you manage project hierarchies by using the hierarchy interface, IVsHierarchy. The IVsUIHierarchy interface redirects commands you invoke from project items to the appropriate hierarchy window instead of the standard command handler.

Project hierarchies

Each project hierarchy contains items that you can view and edit. These items vary depending on project type. For example, a database project might contain stored procedures, database views, and database tables. A programming-language project, on the other hand, will likely include source files and resource files for bitmaps and dialog boxes. Hierarchies can be nested, which gives you some added flexibility when you create a project hierarchy.

When you create a new project type, the project type controls the complete set of items that can be edited in it. However, projects can contain items for which they do not have editing support. For example, Visual C++ projects can contain HTML files, even though Visual C++ does not provide any customized editor for the HTML file type.

Hierarchies manage the persistence of items they contain. The implementation of the hierarchy must control any special properties that affect the persistence of the items within the hierarchy. For example, if the items represent objects in a repository instead of files, the hierarchy implementation must control the persistence of those objects. The IDE itself directs the hierarchy to save the items in compliance with user input, but the IDE does not control any actions required to save those items. Instead, the project is in control.

When a user opens an item in an editor, the hierarchy that controls that item is selected and becomes the active hierarchy. The selected hierarchy determines the set of commands available to act on the item. Tracking user focus in this manner enables the hierarchy to reflect the user's current context.

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