Discover a class to start Microsoft Word and access Word functions from a C++ application by using OLE and IDispatch interfaces. Two classes are provided: the Word automation class CWordAutomation and the wrapper class CEzWordAutomation.
Latest Microsoft Office / Outlook Articles
Developing SharePoint Server 2007 Publishing Sites the Smart and Structured Way
SharePoint MVP and Wrox author Andrew Connell shows a little-known approach to publishing content sites using Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007.
Running Timed Jobs within SharePoint
Discover the uses, configuration and program potential of Timed Jobs within Microsoft Windows SharePoint Services (WSS).
Publishing with Authoring Connector
Learn to integrate Web publishing with working with your Word documents.
Visual Studio Tools for the Microsoft Office System
Take your .NET development one step farther with Microsoft Office System projects.
Importing contacts from Outlook
Import contacts and other information from any contacts folder in Outlook to your application. (The article was updated.)
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MFC Integration with the Windows Transactional File System (TxF)
The Transactional File System (TxF), which allows access to an NTFS file system to be conducted in a transacted manner through extensions to the Windows SDK API. MFC 10, has been extended to support TxF and related technologies. This support allows existing MFC applications to be easily extended to support kernel transactions.
.NET Framework: Collections and Generics
The original release of the .NET Framework included collections as .NET was introduced to the Microsoft programming world. The .NET Framework 2.0 introduced generics to complement the System.Collections namespace and provide a more efficient and well performing option. Read on to learn more...

Working with Queues and Stacks
Apart from Hashtables, queues and stacks are probably the most common Collection classes. This article explains the ins and outs of queues and stacks.
Implementing a WCF Message Contract
WCF implementations normally take two different approaches; a Document style or an API style. Document style implementations are more flexible and often easier to extend and version. Also, Document style or rather, Message Contract service implementations, work well between systems with a shared message assembly. Jeffrey Juday guides you through architecting a WCF Message Contract implementation.