This method finds the prefix that the moniker has in common with another moniker.
At a Glance
Header file: | Oaidl.h |
Windows CE versions: | 2.0 and later |
Syntax
HRESULT CommonPrefixWith( IMoniker * pmkOther,
IMoniker ** ppmkPrefix );
Parameters
pmkOther
[in] Pointer to the IMoniker interface on another moniker to be compared with this one to determine whether there is a common prefix.
ppmkPrefix
[out] Address of IMoniker* pointer variable that receives the interface pointer to the moniker that is the common prefix of this moniker and pmkOther. When successful, the implementation must call IUnknown::AddRef on the resulting moniker; it is the caller’s responsibility to call IUnknown::Release. If an error occurs or if there is no common prefix, the implementation should set *ppmkPrefix to NULL.
Return Values
The method supports the standard return value E_OUTOFMEMORY, as well as the values described in the following table.
Value | Description |
S_OK | A common prefix exists that is neither this moniker nor pmkOther. |
MK_S_NOPREFIX | No common prefix exists. |
MK_S_HIM | The entire pmkOther moniker is a prefix of this moniker. |
MK_S_US | The two monikers are identical. |
MK_S_ME | This moniker is a prefix of the pmkOther moniker. |
MK_E_NOTBINDABLE | This method was called on a relative moniker. It is not meaningful to take the common prefix on a relative moniker. |
Remarks
IMoniker::CommonPrefixWith creates a new moniker that consists of the common prefixes of the moniker on this moniker object and another moniker. If, for example, one moniker represents the path “c:\projects\secret\art\pict1.bmp” and another moniker represents the path “c:\projects\secret\docs\chap1.txt,” the common prefix of these two monikers would be a moniker representing the path “c:\projects\secret.”
Notes to Callers
The IMoniker::CommonPrefixWith method is primarily called in the implementation of the IMoniker::RelativePathTo method. Clients using a moniker to locate an object rarely need to call this method.
Call this method only if pmkOther and this moniker are both absolute monikers. An absolute moniker is either a file moniker or a generic composite whose leftmost component is a file moniker that represents an absolute path. Do not call this method on relative monikers, because it would not produce meaningful results.
Notes to Implementers
Your implementation should first determine whether pmkOther is a moniker of a class that you recognize and for which you can provide special handling (for example, if it is of the same class as this moniker). If so, your implementation should determine the common prefix of the two monikers. Otherwise, it should pass both monikers in a call to the MonikerCommonPrefixWith function, which correctly handles the generic case.