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My guess would be that you need to change the tab order of the edit/combo controls compared to the list control. They either have to be before or after it in the tab order. I forget which.
Roger Allen
Sonork 100.10016
I think I need a new quote, I am on the prowl, so look out for a soft cute furry looking animal, which is really a Hippo in disguise. Its probably me.
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I hate when the solution is so simple...
I've invalidated the combobox...
but thank you for your interest!
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OK guys...I'm trying to display an AVI file on my dialog with a transparent background and I'm not having any luck,
I made an AVI file with a white background on each clip. I have an animation control on my dialog and I have both transparent properties set. When I go to play the AVI, I still see the white background.
Here is the function to create the control:
HWND CreateAnimationCtrl(HWND hwndDlg, int nIDCtl)
{
HWND hwndAnim = NULL;
RECT rc;
POINT pt;
hwndAnim = Animate_Create(hwndDlg, IDC_ANIMATE, WS_CHILD, ghInst);
Animate_Open(hwndAnim, MAKEINTRESOURCE(IDR_AVI));
ShowWindow(hwndAnim, SW_SHOW);
return hwndAnim;
}
Here is what I call in the WM_INITDIALOG routine:
hAnim = CreateAnimationCtrl(hDlg, IDC_ANIMATE);
Animate_Play(hAnim, 0, -1, -1);
Do I have to do something special to the AVI as well?
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Brigg Thorp
Software Engineer
Timex Corporation
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Have you added the ACS_TRANSPARENT (2) flag value in the windows style value of the video window?
ACS_TRANSPARENT:
Allows you to match an animation's background color to that of the underlying window, creating a "transparent" background. The control will send a WM_CTLCOLORSTATIC message to its parent. Use SetBkColor to set the background color for the device context to an appropriate value. The control interprets the upper-left pixel of the first frame as the animation's default background color. It will remap all pixels with that color to the value you supplied in response to WM_CTLCOLORSTATIC.
Daniel
---------------------------
Never change a running system!
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HANDLE CreateFileMapping(
HANDLE hFile,
LPSECURITY_ATTRIBUTES lpAttributes,
DWORD flProtect,
DWORD dwMaximumSizeHigh,
DWORD dwMaximumSizeLow,
LPCTSTR lpName
);
That's the function prototype shown on MSDN, I have a question about the first parameter here: it can be a handle to a disk file if the handle value is not INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE , or else it will be using system page file. I wonder which should I choose, specify a disk file or just use the system page file, which one is better and why? Thanks.
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IPC. I'm trying to develop a project that requires a number of processes cooperate together, each of which needs to know exactly what other processes are doing in order to interact properly.
I'm thinking of using file mapping as my IPC approach, I'm not sure if this is a good way, though. Your help is very much appreciated.
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File Mapping is a very good technique for IPC, in fact that is how COM implements its underlying IPC for local processes.
Using the system page sounds like a good way to go, then there is no file clean up afterwards. Other than that I do not think that it matters which way you do that.
Build a man a fire, and he will be warm for a day Light a man on fire, and he will be warm for the rest of his life!
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Thanks for you and anyone who replied. OK I still have a question here, it may sound stupid but anyway:
Is there any possibility that the mapped file will be trespassed by other process? I mean, if I have process A and B are using the mapped file(I will generate a GUID as mapping file name), is it possible, even very very slightly possible, that any contents within the mapping can be modified by processes other than A and B?
Because I need the contents to be absolutely private and secure to process A and B, this is crucial for me, otherwise I might get fired . So before I begin it I'd like to make sure. Thanks again.
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Bin wrote:
Is there any possibility that the mapped file will be trespassed by other process?
Yes. If you use a named object, a process with the proper security can access that object. Will it? Very unlikely, but still possible.
(Think about it, if process B can see an object owned by process A, so can process C. More importantly, your bosses need to understand that if a process has administrative rights in windows, you simply cannot make the system secure. This is akin to the adage that a physically accessable computer is not fully secure.)
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Hi
there are some programs like MS MediaPlayer and InterVideo WinDVD which, in case of a crash, show a MessageBox with the line, the sourcefile, and a piece of the code that caused the crash. It looks like this e.g:
Unhandled exception in
"C:\Program Files\foo\main.cpp" in line: 289
ASSERT(pFoo != NULL);
How can I implement this feature into my applications?
regards
Greg
modified 12-Sep-18 21:01pm.
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Well, I don't think Microsoft and Intervideo deliver debug versions of their programs tp the customers There must be another way.
Furthermore the assertion dialog (or MessageBox) doesn't look the same like in the MediaPlayer or WinDVD.
modified 12-Sep-18 21:01pm.
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Gregor S. wrote:
Well, I don't think Microsoft and Intervideo deliver debug versions of their programs tp the customers
Well, an ASSERT is suposed to only be present on debug Builds, right?
You can achieve the same by #define _DEBUG on your release build, or creating a proprietary fancy ASSERT macro.
My latest articles:
XOR tricks for RAID data protection
Win32 process suspend/resume tool
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While in Debug mode you could use _CrtDbgReport, however that function only exists in the debug version of the C-Runtime libraries. Look at how ATLs ATLASSERT macro works.
#define _ASSERTE(expr) \
do { if (!(expr) && \
(1 == _CrtDbgReport(_CRT_ASSERT, __FILE__, __LINE__, NULL, #expr))) \
_CrtDbgBreak(); } while (0)
For release mode you could simply create your own function that reports the data in a message box, and you would use these preprocessor defines to get the line number and file: __FILE__, __LINE__
Good Luck
Build a man a fire, and he will be warm for a day Light a man on fire, and he will be warm for the rest of his life!
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I finally managed to create my own macro, could you please take a look whether it is correct? Is seems to work however
void _assert_(void *exp)
{
char err[1024];
sprintf(err, "Assertion Failed!\n\n\"%s\" in line %i.\nASSERT(%s)", \
__FILE__, \
__LINE__, \
exp); \
if(exp)
{
MessageBox(NULL, err,"Fatal Error", MB_OK|MB_ICONSTOP);
PostQuitMessage(0);
}
}
#define _ASSERT_(exp) { _assert_(#exp); }
For testing purposes:
void *pFoo = NULL;
_ASSERT_(pFoo != NULL);
thanks
btw why don't the pre-tags recognise tabs (\t) when I copy and paste my code?
modified 12-Sep-18 21:01pm.
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Your macro looks good to me
Build a man a fire, and he will be warm for a day Light a man on fire, and he will be warm for the rest of his life!
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...that's bugging me...
I wrote a message about a CreateProcessAsUser problem a few hours ago titled "Is it a bird? ... No It's Superuser!".
I've managed to narrow the problem, so it should be more easy to anwser...
Given that I know the name of my administrator account and it's password, how can I get SeAssignPrimaryTokenPrivilege, operating from a regular account, in order to succesfully place a call to CreateProcessAsUser?
The idea is to copy the functionality of Linux' su...
Regards,
Georg Haan(.NL)
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I use the following two line of codes to write vertical text, it works, but the text is facing the left, reads from the top to the bottom. What shall I do if I like to have the vertical text to face the right, and read from bottom up?
stringFormat.SetFormatFlags(StringFormatFlagsDirectionVertical);
graphics->DrawString(string, -1, &myFont, origin, &stringFormat, &blackBrush);
Thanks.
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if there isnt a flag to set what u want (and i havent done so much text output stuff for a while) u could draw to a memdc and invert / flip it before displaying it
"... and so i said to him ... if it don't dance (or code) and you can't eat it either f**k it or throw it away" biz stuff about me
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OK, I've never used GDI+, but in standard GDI, the font is created with the rotation factor. Check that to see whether the value of 900 for Orientation needs to be changed to 2700 where it is constructued, or visa versa.
Roger Allen
Sonork 100.10016
I think I need a new quote, I am on the prowl, so look out for a soft cute furry looking animal, which is really a Hippo in disguise. Its probably me.
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Thanks for the reply. The computer is too heavy for me to turn it upside down.
I tried the following, but for some reason, I only see the ellipse, but no text 'HAPPY DAY!', am I missing something here?
Pen pen(Color(255, 0, 0, 255));
PointF origin(x, y);
WCHAR string[256];
x = 200;
y = 200;
graphics->RotateTransform(90.0f);
graphics->TranslateTransform(x, y, MatrixOrderAppend);
wcscpy(string, L"HAPPY DAY!");
graphics->DrawString(string, -1, &myFont, origin,
&stringFormat, &blackBrush);
graphics->DrawEllipse(&pen, 0, 0, 200, 80);
Thanks!
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