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Processing Text Templates by using a Custom Host

The text template transformation process takes a text template file as the input and produces a text file as the output. You can call the text transformation engine from a Visual Studio extension, or from a standalone application running on a machine on which Visual Studio is installed. However, you must provide a text templating host. This class connects the template to the environment, finding resources such as assemblies and include files, and dealing with the output and error messages.

Tip

If you are writing a package or extension that will run within Visual Studio, consider using the text templating service, instead of writing your own host. For more information, see Invoking Text Transformation in a VS Extension.

Note

We do not recommend using text template transformations in server applications. We do not recommend using text template transformations except in a single thread. This is because the text templating Engine re-uses a single AppDomain to translate, compile, and execute templates. The translated code is not designed to be thread-safe. The Engine is designed to process files serially, as they are in a Visual Studio project at design time.

For run-time applications, consider using preprocessed text templates: see Run-Time Text Generation by using Preprocessed T4 Text Templates.

If your application uses a set of templates that are fixed at compile time, it is easier to use Preprocessed Text Templates. You can also use that approach if your application will run on a machine on which Visual Studio is not installed. For more information, see Run-Time Text Generation by using Preprocessed T4 Text Templates.

Executing a Text Template in Your Application

To execute a text template, you call the ProcessTemplate method of Microsoft.VisualStudio.TextTemplating.Engine:

using Microsoft.VisualStudio.TextTemplating;
...
Engine engine = new Engine();
string output = engine.ProcessTemplate(templateString, host);

Your application must find and provide the template, and must deal with the output.

In the host parameter, you must provide a class that implements ITextTemplatingEngineHost. This is called back by the Engine.

The host must be able to log errors, resolve references to assembly and include files, provide an Application Domain in which the template can execute, and call the appropriate processor for each directive.

Microsoft.VisualStudio.TextTemplating.Engine is defined in Microsoft.VisualStudio.TextTemplating.10.0.dll, and ITextTemplatingEngineHost is defined in Microsoft.VisualStudio.TextTemplating.Interfaces.10.0.dll.

In This Section

Reference

ITextTemplatingEngineHost