You could presumably use a pair of radio buttons to change the feature state
rather than using a feature-selection tree dialog. I believe this was
discussed recently regarding the use of checkboxes (like Office 2003) to
control feature selection.

 

The user would still be able to control the feature selection states on the
command line. To avoid this you'd probably need to add an Error custom
action (type 19) at some point.

 

Why is it not possible to install both the service and the websites?

 

-- 

Mike Dimmick

 

  _____  

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Pierson Lee
(Volt)
Sent: 22 June 2007 20:14
To: Bob Arnson
Cc: wix-users@lists.sourceforge.net
Subject: Re: [WiX-users] Installer Design

 

That would be good if I wanted the user to choose which feature to install.
What I'm trying to do is install two mutually exclusive features. So if they
choose to install one, it won't install the other.

 

Is that possible?

 

From: Bob Arnson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, June 21, 2007 5:21 PM
To: Pierson Lee (Volt)
Cc: wix-users@lists.sourceforge.net
Subject: Re: [WiX-users] Installer Design

 

Pierson Lee (Volt) wrote: 

 

To accomplish my first goal of being able to choose one of two, do I want to
be looking at Merge Modules?


No. Just use features; the stock feature-selection control gives users
control over which features get installed and Feature/ComponentRef elements
give you control over which components go into which features.



-- 
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http://joyofsetup.com/
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