Training
Module
Monitor and troubleshoot Windows client performance - Training
This module explores methods and tools for monitoring and troubleshooting Windows client performance issues.
This browser is no longer supported.
Upgrade to Microsoft Edge to take advantage of the latest features, security updates, and technical support.
A moniker in COM is not only a way to identify an object—a moniker is also implemented as an object. This object provides services allowing a component to obtain a pointer to the object identified by the moniker. This process is referred to as binding.
Monikers are objects that implement the IMoniker interface and are generally implemented in DLLs as component objects. There are two ways of viewing the use of monikers: as a moniker client, a component that uses a moniker to get a pointer to another object; and as a moniker provider, a component that supplies monikers identifying its objects to moniker clients.
OLE uses monikers to connect to and activate objects, whether they are in the same machine or across a network. A very important use is for network connections. They are also used to identify, connect to, and run OLE compound document link objects. In this case, the link source acts as the moniker provider and the container holding the link object acts as the moniker client.
For more information, see the following topics:
Training
Module
Monitor and troubleshoot Windows client performance - Training
This module explores methods and tools for monitoring and troubleshooting Windows client performance issues.