![]() ![]() beyond the lifetime of the reference held in memory. Persistent Events – As a solution developer you can subscribe to an event that is ‘persisted’ with the document i.e. I wrote about this scenario in a previous post so have a look at Using the event monitor tool if that’s of interest. Although the Event monitor doesn’t report events in addons/ins it can still be very useful if you’re trying to understand what a particular addon is doing to your shapes by watching for FormulaChanged events, for example. ![]() You can see the effects a particular change has of on Documents, Pages and Shapes, and identify what ScopeIDs a particular sequence occurs in. Once the SDK’s installed, you should find three new tools available on the Developer ribbon tab:Įvent monitor – The Event monitor is a great tool for discovering which events Visio is firing. C:\Program Files\Microsoft Office\Office 15\VisSDK.C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Office\Office15\VisSDK.Note that both the 20 downloads come with 32 and 64 bit versions of the SDK so make sure you download the one that matches the equivalent version of Visio that you’re running. Although the Visio 2013 documentation is available online, the code samples and tools are not and downloading is the only way to get hold of them.Īlthough I’m just going to talk about the 2013 SDK in this post, here is a list of the SDK downloads back to 2003, so if you’re not yet running 2013 on your machine, there’s a matching download for your system and the general structure of the SDK is largely unchanged over the previous years: The Visio SDK is a set of tools, documentation and code samples that help you develop Visio solutions whether they be ShapeSheet, Code or the more usual combination of both. ![]()
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