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Hi~
Lei wrote
"I have 2 forms, form1 contains a ListView. What I want to do is, when
clicking an item in the ListView, hide form1 and show form2. Code for
ListView's SelectedIndexChanged: { form2.Show(); this.Hide(); }. When I
click the item, form2 shows with form1's title and menu. I noticed that when mouse down, the SelectedIndexChanged event was triggered and bring form2 to front. But when mouse up, system redrawed the selected item and bring title and menu back to form1's. I tried to handle MouseDown and MouseUp event of ListView but they were never triggered. Now I used a tricky way to solve the problem: start a thread and use Control.Invoke to switch forms. It is not good, I think there must be a better solution. Thanks."
I am facing the same problem. Someone solve it with setting timer. However, is there any other way to solve it?
Thanks~
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Don't use the SelectedIndexChanged event. It won't tell you if the user clicks on the currently selected item, either. Also, if the user is trying to use the direction pad or scroll wheel, the event will fire as they're scrolling between items; you probably want it to fire only when they press the Action button.
What you should do is set the Activation property to ItemActivation.OneClick, and handle the ItemActivate event. This also gives you keyboard/keypad interaction for free.
Don't you just love the complete, comprehensive nature of the documentation? In response to your post, I tried this out on both .NET CF 1.0 SP3 and on 2.0 Beta 1. At least 2.0 Beta 1 gives you a compiler warning. I've raised the issue on the Compact Framework newsgroup, and I hope that will encourage clearer documentation.
Stability. What an interesting concept. -- Chris Maunder
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It works!
Thank you very much!
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How about treeview?
treeview got that same problem
there is no activation event handler in compact framework
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Hi gurus,
I have 2 questions:
1) How can I attach a hwnd to a graphics?
When I do Graphics gr=new Graphics(m.HWnd) , I have the message "System.Drawing.Graphics.Graphics(System.IntPtr) is inaccessible due to its protection level"
2) What is the equivalent of the GetSystemMetrics() API in C#?
Best regards.
Thanks.
There is no spoon.
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Graphics gr = Graphics.FromHwnd( m.HWnd ) If the HWnd is coming from a Windows Forms control, use ctl.CreateGraphics() instead.
As for GetSystemMetrics, that depends on what values you want. The simplest thing to do is often to use P/Invoke.
[System.Runtime.InteropServices.DllImport("user32.dll")]
private static extern int GetSystemMetrics( int metric );
Stability. What an interesting concept. -- Chris Maunder
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Hi,
For the graphics, I need to draw a button in the Non client area. I can get the handle of the non client area. I want to draw a button using the ControlPaint.DrawButton method wich need a Graphics as input.
ok for the dll import
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When you receive the WM_NCPAINT notification message I mentioned to you before, the Message.WParam contains the HRGN (handle to a region) to be painted. You P/Invoke GetDCEx passing your window handle (HWND - the Handle property on all Control s), the HRGN mentioned above, and DCX_WINDOW|DCX_INTERSECTRGN ( =0x81 ). This is covered in the Platform SDK for the WM_NCPAINT message. IntelliSense will not help. You must read about the notification messages and APIs when working with this type of stuff.
The WM_NCPAINT documentation in the Platform SDK even includes a sample of calling GetDCEx .
The return value from GetDCEx is the HDC (handle to a device context) from which you create a Graphics object. Use the static Graphics.FromHdc method to get a Graphics instance for the non-client region.
Microsoft MVP, Visual C#
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Hi Heath,
I have done what you said, but there is nothing. Maybe I have wrongly declared the things...
[System.Runtime.InteropServices.DllImport("user32.dll")]
private static extern IntPtr GetDCEx(IntPtr hWnd, IntPtr hrgnClip, long flags);
in the WndProc method, I trap the WN_NCPAINT
Graphics gr=Graphics.FromHdc(GetDCEx(m.HWnd, m.WParam, DCX_WINDOW|DCX_INTERSECTRGN));
ControlPaint.DrawButton(gr, 50, 1, 5, 5, ButtonState.Normal);
nothing happens. it should draw a button 5x5 at pos (50, 1) in the title bar, but I see nothing. Maybe I don't use it well...
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A DWORD translates to an int (or uint ), not a long . The value of DCX_WINDOW|DCX_INTERSECTRGN wouldn't, therefore, by read from the execution stack when calling GetDCEx - only 0 would be read and that wouldn't produce the results you want.
Also, don't bunch your method calls together so much. Try debugging that and you'll see that you can't check return values so it will be hard to know why a particular method failed.
Microsoft MVP, Visual C#
My Articles
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Hi, I have changed the long to an int
but I still have the error "An unhandled exception of type 'System.OutOfMemoryException' occurred in system.drawing.dll
Additional information: Out of memory."
when I try to do:
Graphics gr=Graphics.FromHdc(GetDCEx(m.HWnd, m.WParam, DCX_WINDOW|DCX_INTERSECTRGN));
I have now declared the functions like this:
[System.Runtime.InteropServices.DllImport("user32.dll")]
private static extern IntPtr GetDCEx(IntPtr hWnd, IntPtr hrgnClip, int flags);
and the constants:
private const int DCX_WINDOW=0x0001;
private const int DCX_INTERSECTRGN=0x0080;
while these constants are declared as long in the WinUser.h from the Platform SDK.
Also, Platform SDK declares the GetDCEx function like this:
HDC GetDCEx(
HWND hWnd,
HRGN hrgnClip,
DWORD flags
);
Maybe I'm wrong somewher in the C# translation...
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A native long is 32 bits. A managed long is 64 bits (System.Int64 ). This is documented in the Platform SDK (and I know from many years of experience). If you want further proof, read Platform Invoke Data Types[^] in the .NET Framework SDK.
Microsoft MVP, Visual C#
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ok for the length between Win32 and .NET.
I have written the declarations as you advised me, but I get an error when I execute the line
Graphics gr=Graphics.FromHdc(GetDCEx(m.HWnd, m.WParam, DCX_WINDOW|DCX_INTERSECTRGN));
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It would help to know on which operation, which means - as I said before - you have to split them up.
Microsoft MVP, Visual C#
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I have declared the following:
private const int DCX_WINDOW=0x0001;
private const int DCX_INTERSECTRGN=0x0080;
[System.Runtime.InteropServices.DllImport("user32.dll")]
private static extern IntPtr GetDCEx(IntPtr hWnd, IntPtr hrgnClip, int flags);
I have trapped the WM_NCPAINT in the WndProc method of my System.Windows.Forms.Form derived window:
protected override void WndProc(ref Message m)
{
switch (m.Msg)
{
case WM_NCPAINT:
{
Debug.WriteLine("WM_NCPAINT");
Graphics gr=Graphics.FromHdc(GetDCEx(m.HWnd, m.WParam, DCX_WINDOW|DCX_INTERSECTRGN));
ControlPaint.DrawButton(gr, 60, 1, 5, 5, ButtonState.Normal);
break;
}
}
base.WndProc(ref m);
}
and I have the message "An unhandled exception of type 'System.OutOfMemoryException' occurred in system.drawing.dll
Additional information: Out of memory.", at the line
Graphics gr=Graphics.FromHdc(GetDCEx(m.HWnd, m.WParam, DCX_WINDOW|DCX_INTERSECTRGN));
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As I said before, split the line:
IntPtr hdc = GetDCEx(m.HWnd, m.WParam, DCX_WINDOW|DCX_INTERSECTRGN);
Graphics g = Graphics.FromHdc(hdc); This is the very problem I mentioned earlier about combing such complex, compound statements together. Now which lines does the exception get thrown?
Microsoft MVP, Visual C#
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I still get the error
it seems the handle is null... When I call the GetDCEx I have 0x0 as result.
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bouli wrote:
When I call the GetDCEx I have 0x0 as result
Check to make sure you have a valid handle to the window when you call GetDCEx .
- Nick Parker My Blog | My Articles
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I always get a null handle
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And for the 3rd time, on which line do you get the error after splitting the two methods on two separate lines?
Microsoft MVP, Visual C#
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I get the error because the Handle returned by GetDCEx is null.
I can understand that the handle is null once (at initialization time), but it's always null
there is maybe something wrong in my declaration?
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So the exception is being thrown on the second line? How hard is that question to answer?
You need to debug your code and find out this type of information. Is the Message.HWnd or Message.WParam NULL (IntPtr.Zero ) before being passed to GetDCEx ?
I never said splitting the lines would make it work - that doesn't matter when the compiler produces the IL. I said it would make things easier to debug. Put a break-point in there and step through your code to see what the inputs and outputs of the methods are. And always perform checks (like making sure that GetDCEx doesn't return IntPtr.Zero before passing it to Graphics.FromHdc ) - never assume something just works (especially when dealing with interop since the callee is unmanaged by the CLR).
Microsoft MVP, Visual C#
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hi,
ok, I'm going to dig deeper.
but it was easier to draw in the NC area with MFC
.NET is very different... I need to check my marks.
Thanks for the help
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Yes, of course it's very different. .NET is referred to as a "managed environment" because the Common Language Runtime (CLR) manages memory, provides garbage collection (no explicit destruction of objects like in C/C++/MFC), and many other things.
The important thing to remember is that Windows Forms controls encapsulates the Windows APIs, so everything possible in MFC would be possible in .NET, but you have to P/Invoke native APIs (and don't P/Invoke those that are already covered in .NET APIs), define structs and consts, etc. You can't simply call native APIs like you could in MFC, unless you were to use a Managed C++ assembly in a mixed-mode compilation.
Microsoft MVP, Visual C#
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how to get all TimeZone and send it to Time Server, recieved Time Server reply and add it to database
thanks.
Nho'c Ti`
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