Create an Intitialize Method
Parameterized constructors are not supported in Visual Basic 6.0. To work
around this limitation, a common Visual Basic 6.0 design pattern was
to create a method called Initialize which would be called directly after
creating an object. .NET brings with it support for constructors that
take parameters. In keeping with the aforementioned design pattern, a
developer may create a parameterized constructor on his .NET form and expose it
to Visual Basic 6.0 as an Initialize method. To do this, use the
InteropFormInitializer attribute.
Note that the Form must always expose a default constructor, one that takes no parameters, in addition to any that are parameterized.
The code below demonstrates decorating a constructor with the InteropFormInitializer attribute.
Public Sub New(ByVal helloText As String)
Me.New()
lblHelloText.Text = helloText
End Sub
To quickly define an Initialize method use the InteropInitialize snippet installed with the toolkit: Simply type interopinit+Tab and complete the method signature.
Only certain Types may be used as parameters. See Type Restrictions for details.