I have successfully got Reg-Free COM working using C++ and C# using manifest files i.e. early binding. I am now trying to get this working using late binding. The technique I have found, after much web searching, appears to be using "Microsoft.Windows.ActCtx".
An example I used to test this was MS's "Registration-Free Activation of COM-Based Components" found at http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms973913.aspx to generate the SideBySide example. I then attempted to use a scripting language; VBScript and Python however both have fail in the same way (also tried VBA). The VBScript example is given below:
Set actctx = CreateObject("Microsoft.Windows.ActCtx")
actctx.manifest = "C:\test\client.exe.manifest"
Set SBSObj = actctx.CreateObject("SideBySide.SideBySideClass")
wscript.echo SBSObj.Version
Using something like SysInternals' "Process Monitor" you can see that running the following command (Windows 7 x64):
C:\Windows\SysWOW64\cscript.exe //Nologo C:\test\VBRegFreeTest.vbs
appears to work by loading the manifests and attempt to start looking for the equivalent registry calls and fails to find them. So it appears to partially work. I've also copied wScript.exe to the local directory to rule out directory issues for running application and manifest files.
I've read Microsoft.Windows.ActCtx on Windows Xp and have included the "prodID" in the manifest but it still fails. The manifest files work correctly with C++ and C# examples.
I can't help feeling that the "Microsoft.Windows.ActCtx" has issues. Documentation on this is very limited. Any help on using manifest files with Python or VBScript would be very much appreciated. I would be interested to know if anyone has got "Microsoft.Windows.ActCtx" to work.