IDataObject::GetCanonicalFormatEtc

Provides a standard FORMATETC structure that is logically equivalent to one that is more complex. You use this method to determine whether two different FORMATETC structures would return the same data, removing the need for duplicate rendering.

HRESULT GetCanonicalFormatEtc(
  FORMATETC * pFormatetcIn,  //Pointer to the FORMATETC structure
  FORMATETC * pFormatetcOut  //Pointer to the canonical equivalent 
                             // FORMATETC structure
);
 

Parameters

pFormatetcIn
[in] Pointer to the FORMATETC structure that defines the format, medium, and target device that the caller would like to use to retrieve data in a subsequent call such as IDataObject::GetData. The TYMED member is not significant in this case and should be ignored.
pFormatetcOut
[out] Pointer to a FORMATETC structure that contains the most general information possible for a specific rendering, making it canonically equivalent to pFormatetcIn. The caller must allocate this structure and the GetCanonicalFormatEtc method must fill in the data. To retrieve data in a subsequent call like IDataObject::GetData, the caller uses the supplied value of pFormatetcOut, unless the value supplied is NULL. This value is NULL if the method returns DATA_S_SAMEFORMATETC. The TYMED member is not significant in this case and should be ignored.

Return Values

This method supports the standard return values E_INVALIDARG, E_UNEXPECTED, and E_OUTOFMEMORY, as well as the following:

S_OK
The returned FORMATETC structure is different from the one that was passed.
DATA_S_SAMEFORMATETC
The FORMATETC structures are the same and NULL is returned in pFormatetcOut.
DV_E_LINDEX
Invalid value for lindex; currently, only -1 is supported.
DV_E_FORMATETC
Invalid value for pFormatetc.
OLE_E_NOTRUNNING
Object application is not running.

Remarks

If a data object can supply exactly the same data for more than one requested FORMATETC structure, IDataObject::GetCanonicalFormatEtc can supply a "canonical", or standard FORMATETC that gives the same rendering as a set of more complicated FORMATETC structures. For example, it is common for the data returned to be insensitive to the target device specified in any one of a set of otherwise similar FORMATETC structures.

Notes to Callers

A call to this method can determine whether two calls to IDataObject::GetData on a data object, specifying two different FORMATETC structures, would actually produce the same renderings, thus eliminating the need for the second call and improving performance. If the call to GetCanonicalFormatEtc results in a canonical format being written to the pFormatetcOut parameter, the caller then uses that structure in a subsequent call to IDataObject::GetData.

Notes to Implementers

Conceptually, it is possible to think of FORMATETC structures in groups defined by a canonical FORMATETC that provides the same results as each of the group members. In constructing the canonical FORMATETC, you should make sure it contains the most general information possible that still produces a specific rendering.

For data objects that never provide device-specific renderings, the simplest implementation of this method is to copy the input FORMATETC to the output FORMATETC, store a NULL in the ptd field of the output FORMATETC, and return DATA_S_SAMEFORMATETC.

QuickInfo

  Windows NT: Use version 3.1 or later.
  Windows: Use Windows 95 or later.
  Windows CE: Unsupported.
  Header: Declared in objidl.h.

See Also

IDataObject::GetData, FORMATETC