Erm, actually, I found out what the real problem was about an hour or
so after posting, and I don't think the post had cleared moderation as
of then, so I couldn't throw solved in there.
So it is solved, and in fact isn't at all related to anything in my
post above. The problem seemed to be a capitalization error in the get
portion of a certain Property that was causing it to return itself.
:X

Thanks though!

On Dec 27, 5:30 am, "Kaarthik Padmanabhan" <[email protected]>
wrote:
> I am just spitballing, but have you tried
> setting System.ComponentModel.Bindable and System.ComponentModel.Browsable
> to false?
>
>
>
>
>
> On Sat, Dec 27, 2008 at 11:49 AM, nerd_boy <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > I've got two custom controls, A and B. A is public, B is internal. B
> > is meant to act as a child to A, and all A acts as is the 'parent' for
> > one or more Bs. My reasons for keeping B internal is because A
> > contains the information that all Bs will access, and B is dependant
> > on the information in an A.
>
> > Anywho, whenever I attempt to add control A to a form in Visual Studio
> > Express(2008), the Designer crashes. After messing around with things
> > abit, it would seem that the problem lies with B being internal, since
> > making it public dosn't cause Designer to crash, but do what it would
> > normally do.
>
> > Is there anyway to get the Designer to completely ignore B? I've tried
> > [ToolboxBrowsable(false)], but this didn't work at all.
>
> > Thanks!
>
> --
> Kaarthik,http://coding-passion.blogspot.com

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