I have an application (written in C++ with MFC, but I don't think that that's particularly relevant) that embeds the Internet Explorer ActiveX WebBrowser control for the purpose of showing some HTML pages. One requirement has always been to use the application's font name and size settings as the default settings for the HTML, rather than Internet Exporer's defaults.
To achieve this, the application implements the IDocHostUIHandler2 COM interface, which it passes to the WebBrowser control. This causes the control to call the application's implementation of GetOptionKeyPath, which lets the application set the registry location that the WebBrowser control gets its settings from. Armed with Sysinternals' tools to see which keys IE uses to find the font name and size, this has been sufficient to do what I need.
However, the appeareance of Internet Explorer 9 has come as a nasty surprise: on all machines that I've tested with that have IE9 installed, the WebBrowser control uses its own settings, ignoring the registry location from the application. Testing with a debugger shows that the WebBrowser control never calls the provided GetOptionKeyPath.
A bit more experimentation shows that the IE9 WebBrowser control is calling the similar (but not identical) GetOverrideKeyPath method: this allegedly provides a way to override IE settings, while falling back to IE's actual settings if nothing is found in the relevant part of the registry. Unfortunately this has two problems: 1) It's not quite what I want, and 2) IE9 doesn't always check under the GetOverrideKeyPath registry location before going to the IE default registry settings.
Looking at the GetOptionKeyPath MSDN page there are a few complaints along similar lines, but no solutions. Has anyone found a clean way to persuade the WebBrowser control to revert to the pre-IE9 behaviour of actually calling GetOptionKeyPath as documented?