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Clipboard Copy in a Nutshell

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25 Nov 1999 1  
Clipboard copy in a nutshell.

Supporting copy is usually straightforward for most applications. It usually requires 10-20 lines of code. But like many features of MFC, the implementation is simple. However, finding the information needed to create the implementation is tedious and time consuming. To save you many hours of reading documentation, I have included several common methods for placing data on the clipboard.

Copying a Bitmap of the Client Area

The following bit of code renders the client area using OnDraw() into a bitmap. The bitmap is placed on the clipboard as a CF_BITMAP that is recognizable by most applications that accept bitmaps. This code will work will all mapping modes provided that mapping mode is set in the OnPrepareDC() function.

void CXStitchView::OnEditCopy() 
{
    CRect       rect;
    CClientDC   dc(this);
    CDC         memDC;
    CBitmap     bitmap;
    
    GetClientRect(&rect); 

    // Create memDC

    memDC.CreateCompatibleDC(&dc);
    bitmap.CreateCompatibleBitmap(&dc, rect.Width(), rect.Height());
    CBitmap* pOldBitmap = memDC.SelectObject(&bitmap);

    // Fill in memDC

    memDC.FillSolidRect(rect, dc.GetBkColor()); 
    OnPrepareDC(&memDC);
    OnDraw(&memDC);

    // Copy contents of memDC to clipboard

    OpenClipboard();
    EmptyClipboard();
    SetClipboardData(CF_BITMAP, bitmap.GetSafeHandle());
    CloseClipboard();

    // Clean up

    memDC.SelectObject(pOldBitmap);
    bitmap.Detach();
}

Copying a Table of Data to the Clipboard

Placing a table of data on the clipboard is easy. It is simply a string of text. Tabs separate columns, new lines separate rows. Here's some example source.

#include <afxpriv.h>


void CClipExamView::OnEditCopy() 
{
    // Create a shared memory file

    CSharedFile sf(GMEM_MOVEABLE | GMEM_SHARE | GMEM_ZEROINIT);

    // Place clipboard data in the shared memory file

    RenderTableData(sf);

    if (sf.GetLength() > 0) {
        // Put the data on the clipboard

        OpenClipboard();
        EmptyClipboard();
        SetClipboardData(CF_TEXT, sf.Detach());
        CloseClipboard();
    }
}

void CClipExamView::RenderTableData(CFile &file)
{
    // Columns are separated by tabs ('\t')

    // Rows are separated by new lines ('\n')

    CString buffer = "1\t2\t3\n4\t5\t6\n";
    file.Write(buffer, buffer.GetLength()); 
}

Copying Formatted Data to the Clipboard

Formatted text can support bold, italic or any other formatting that can be done in a word processor. Formatted text is usually placed on the clipboard as RTF (Rich Text Format).

The Rich Text Format is intended as an interchange format for Word-processing applications. Because of that, it is a rather large and feature rich file format. Fortunately, it is possible to describe a minimal RTF command set for creating simple formatted documents.

Basic RTF commands:

\par - Starts a new paragraph. 
\tab - A tab. 
\b - Enable Bold (scoped within a group) 
\i - Enable Italics (scoped within a group) 
\ul - Enable Underline (scoped within a group)

For example, the RTF string:

{\rtf1 {1 \tab 2 \tab 3 \par 4 \tab {\b\i 5} \tab 6}}

Source

#include <afxpriv.h>


void CClipExamView::OnEditCopy() 
{
    // Create a shared memory file

    CSharedFile sf(GMEM_MOVEABLE | GMEM_SHARE | GMEM_ZEROINIT);

    // Place clipboard data in the shared memory file

    RenderFormattedData(sf);

    if (sf.GetLength() > 0) {
        // Put the data on the clipboard

        OpenClipboard();
        EmptyClipboard();
        SetClipboardData(::RegisterClipboardFormat(CF_RTF), sf.Detach());
        CloseClipboard();
    }
}

void CClipExamView::RenderFormattedData(CFile &file)
{
    // RTF (Rich Text Format) - Don't forget to escape

    // the \ character in your C strings!

    CString buffer = "{\\rtf1 {1 \\tab 2 \\tab 3" 
               " \\par 4 \\tab {\\b\\i 5} \\tab 6}}";
    file.Write(buffer, buffer.GetLength()); 
}

Getting More Info on RTF

Most books on file format address RTF in some form. You can find the RTF specification here.

Virtually all word processors can save RTF files. This is usually a good place to start when building an RTF template.

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