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VCCodeClass.AddStruct(String, Object, Object, Object, vsCMAccess) Method

Definition

Creates a new structure code construct and inserts the code in the correct location.

EnvDTE::CodeStruct AddStruct(std::wstring const & Name, winrt::Windows::Foundation::IInspectable const & Position, winrt::Windows::Foundation::IInspectable const & Bases, winrt::Windows::Foundation::IInspectable const & ImplementedInterfaces, EnvDTE::vsCMAccess Access = EnvDTE.vsCMAccess.vsCMAccessDefault);
[System.Runtime.InteropServices.DispId(68)]
public EnvDTE.CodeStruct AddStruct (string Name, object Position, object Bases, object ImplementedInterfaces, EnvDTE.vsCMAccess Access = EnvDTE.vsCMAccess.vsCMAccessDefault);
[<System.Runtime.InteropServices.DispId(68)>]
abstract member AddStruct : string * obj * obj * obj * EnvDTE.vsCMAccess -> EnvDTE.CodeStruct
Public Function AddStruct (Name As String, Optional Position As Object, Optional Bases As Object, Optional ImplementedInterfaces As Object, Optional Access As vsCMAccess = EnvDTE.vsCMAccess.vsCMAccessDefault) As CodeStruct

Parameters

Name
String

Required. The name of the new structure.

Position
Object

Optional. Default = 0. The code element after which to add the new element. If the value is a CodeElement, then the new element is added immediately after it.Because collections begin their count at 1, passing 0 indicates that the new element should be placed at the beginning of the collection. A value of -1 means the element should be placed at the end.

Bases
Object

Required. Default value is Nothing or null. A variant that holds a SafeArray of fully qualified type names or VCCodeInterface objects from which the new interface derives.

ImplementedInterfaces
Object

Required. Default value is Nothing or null. A SafeArray of fully qualified type names or VCCodeInterface objects, each representing interfaces that the new class promises to implement.

Access
vsCMAccess

Optional. A vsCMAccess constant.

Returns

A CodeStruct object.

Attributes

Remarks

Visual C++ requires the colon-separated (::) format for its fully qualified type names. All other languages support the period-separated format.

The correctness of the arguments is determined by the language behind the code model.

Applies to