Click here to Skip to main content
65,938 articles
CodeProject is changing. Read more.
Articles
(untagged)

Hiding the Taskbar and Startmenu (start orb) in Windows Vista and Windows 7

0.00/5 (No votes)
25 Nov 2011 4  
How to hide the taskbar and startmenu (start orb) under Windows Vista

Introduction

I recently needed to hide the Windows taskbar and startmenu. All the code that I found on the net for this purpose did not work on Windows Vista, so I decided to write some by myself. The solution I have found works well on Windows XP, Windows Vista and Windows 7, both 32- and 64-bit.

Background

Hiding the taskbar is very easy, because its window handle can easily been found with a call to the FindWindow WINAPI function:

[DllImport("user32.dll", SetLastError = true)]
static extern IntPtr FindWindowEx(IntPtr parentHandle, IntPtr childAfter,
    string className,  string windowTitle);

IntPtr taskBarWnd = FindWindow("Shell_TrayWnd", null);

Once we know the window handle, we can hide the window using the WINAPI function ShowWindow. If you do this, the taskbar is hidden, but the "Start" button still remains visible. Under Windows XP (and before) this was also easy, because the "Start" button was a child window of the taskbar and its window handle can be found with a call to FindWindowEx:

IntPtr startWnd = FindWindowEx(taskBarWnd, IntPtr.Zero, "Button", "Start");

However, this changed with Windows Vista: If you look closely, you will see that the Vista start orb is overlapping the taskbar a little bit. The start orb is not a child window of the taskbar anymore, but a window of its own. To find the handle of this window, I proceed as follows:

First, I get the id of the process that owns the taskbar window:

[DllImport("user32.dll")]
static extern uint GetWindowThreadProcessId(IntPtr hwnd, out int lpdwProcessId);

int procId;
GetWindowThreadProcessId(taskBarWnd, out procId);

Then I enumerate all threads of this process by using managed code. For each thread, I enumerate its windows by using the WINAPI function EnumThreadWindows:

Process p = Process.GetProcessById(procId);
if (p != null)
{
    // enumerate all threads of that process...
    foreach (ProcessThread t in p.Threads)
    {
        EnumThreadWindows(t.Id, MyEnumThreadWindowsProc, IntPtr.Zero);
    }
}

The EnumThreadWindows function lets Windows call my callback function MyEnumThreadWindowsProc for each window of the given thread. Within the callback function, I check whether the caption of each window is "Start" (which is true only for the start menu window):

private static bool MyEnumThreadWindowsProc(IntPtr hWnd, IntPtr lParam)
{
    StringBuilder buffer = new StringBuilder(256);
    if (GetWindowText(hWnd, buffer, buffer.Capacity) > 0)
    {
        if (buffer.ToString() == VistaStartMenuCaption)
        {
            vistaStartMenuWnd = hWnd;
            return false;
        }
    }
    return true;
}

Using the Code

I packed everything in a single static class so you don't have to worry about WINAPI. Just include the class Taskbar in your application and call the static method Hide or Show. That's all, really! Of course this works on Windows XP, Vista and Windows 7!

// hide the taskbar and startmenu
Taskbar.Hide();

History

  • 2008-04-23: Version 1.0 posted
  • 2008-07-16: Version 1.1 posted, sources updated so they should work also on non-English versions of Vista
  • 2011-11-24: Version 1.2 posted, added an alternate way to find a window handle, solution updated to VS2010

License

This article has no explicit license attached to it but may contain usage terms in the article text or the download files themselves. If in doubt please contact the author via the discussion board below.

A list of licenses authors might use can be found here