Imagine there is a web page with a <input type="file" />. I open this page in Firefox, and click on the file button. Then a dialog will popup.
I want to set the file name edit of the popup dialog programmatically in C++:
First I use Spy++ to check window class, the Firefox window and popup dialog properties in Spy++ look like:
Firefox window:
Handle: 001E013E
Caption: Table with objects - Mozilla Firefox
Class: MozillaWindowClass
Popup dialog:
Handle: 004508BE
Caption: File Upload
Class: #32770 (Dialog)
Spy++ also shows browser window is the parent of popup dialog.
My code looks like:
#include <Windows.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
HWND hBrowser = FindWindow(L"MozillaWindowClass", NULL);
printf("Browser hwnd=%X\n", hBrowser);
HWND hDialog = FindWindowEx(hBrowser, NULL, L"#32770 (Dialog)", NULL);
printf("Dialog hwnd=%X\n", hDialog);
system("pause");
}
But the value of hBrowser does not equal the value in Spy++ dialog, and value of hDialog is NULL. I have only one Firefox window opened, with only one tab.
Then I tried to change my code to:
// 0x001E013E is the handle in Spy++
HWND hDialog = FindWindowEx((HWND)0x001E013E, NULL, L"#32770 (Dialog)", NULL);
hDialog still outputs as NULL.
Questions:
Why the handle in Spy++ and the one I get in program is not the same?
Does the "parent window" in Spy++ have the same meaning with the parent parameter in FindWindowEx?
Note: I can't use window title to do the find, due to localization issue (Firefox may be installed in languages other than English).
MozillaWindowClass is the owner of the open dialog, it is not a parent you can use with FindWindowEx. There can also be more than one MozillaWindowClass window so it is better to look for the dialog first:
BOOL CALLBACK FindMozillaOpenFilenameDialogEnumProc(HWND hWnd, LPARAM param)
{
HWND*pData = (HWND*) param;
if (GetClassLongPtr(hWnd, GCW_ATOM) == 32770) // Found a dialog?
{
HWND hOwner = GetWindow(hWnd, GW_OWNER);
if (hOwner)
{
WCHAR buf[100];
GetClassName(hOwner, buf, 100);
if (0 == lstrcmp(buf, TEXT("MozillaWindowClass"))) // The dialog is owned by a Mozilla window?
{
HWND hCombo = GetDlgItem(hWnd, 0x047c); // cmb13
GetClassName(hCombo, buf, 100);
buf[8] = '\0'; // Some Windows versions use ComboBox and some use ComboBoxEx32, we only care if it is some type of combobox
if (0 == lstrcmp(buf, TEXT("ComboBox"))) // The dialog contains a ComboBox with the expected ID?
{
*pData = hWnd;
return false;
}
}
}
}
return true;
}
int main()
{
HWND hDialog = NULL;
EnumWindows(FindMozillaOpenFilenameDialogEnumProc, (LPARAM) &hDialog);
printf("Dialog hwnd=%X\n", hDialog);
if (hDialog)
{
HWND hCombo = GetDlgItem(hDialog, 0x047c);
SendMessage(hCombo, WM_SETTEXT, 0, (LPARAM) TEXT("c:\\foo\\bar.exe")); // Could also use CDM_SETCONTROLTEXT?
}
return 0;
}
This code relies on undocumented and internal names and window relationships, it could break at any time.
Keep in mind that "MozillaWindowClass" is a internal Mozilla name and could change at any time. The documented cmb13 id of the filename control is only documented for GetOpenFileName and GetSaveFileName but not for IFileDialog based dialogs. You really should use UI Automation when you interact with the open dialog in another application!
Related
In VC++, I use EnumWindows(...), GetWindow(...), and GetWindowLong(), to get the list of windows and check whether the window is top window (no other window as owner), and whether the window is visible (WS_VISIBLE). However, although my desktop is showing only 5 windows, this EnumWindows is giving me 50 windows, how funny! Any Windows geek here please help me clarify...
The way to list out only windows in taskbar (or similarly in Alt-Tab box) is described by Raymond in this article on MSDN blog:
Which windows appear in the Alt+Tab list?
And this is the super function to check whether a window is shown in alt-tab:
BOOL IsAltTabWindow(HWND hwnd)
{
TITLEBARINFO ti;
HWND hwndTry, hwndWalk = NULL;
if(!IsWindowVisible(hwnd))
return FALSE;
hwndTry = GetAncestor(hwnd, GA_ROOTOWNER);
while(hwndTry != hwndWalk)
{
hwndWalk = hwndTry;
hwndTry = GetLastActivePopup(hwndWalk);
if(IsWindowVisible(hwndTry))
break;
}
if(hwndWalk != hwnd)
return FALSE;
// the following removes some task tray programs and "Program Manager"
ti.cbSize = sizeof(ti);
GetTitleBarInfo(hwnd, &ti);
if(ti.rgstate[0] & STATE_SYSTEM_INVISIBLE)
return FALSE;
// Tool windows should not be displayed either, these do not appear in the
// task bar.
if(GetWindowLong(hwnd, GWL_EXSTYLE) & WS_EX_TOOLWINDOW)
return FALSE;
return TRUE;
}
Credited to the source code here:
http://www.dfcd.net/projects/switcher/switcher.c
The windows that you are talking about, with an X button and a title bar, etc. are not the only kind of windows. Buttons, dropdown menus, labels, icons, text boxes, the task bar, and just about everything else is a window too1. So EnumWindows is doing exactly what it's supposed to do: enumerate all the top level windows.
1 Even though this is true, EnumWindows only enumerates the top level windows. That means it won't enumerate any child windows:
The EnumWindows function does not enumerate child windows, with the exception of a few top-level windows owned by the system that have the WS_CHILD style.
However, many things on your desktop are windows as well, not just the "windows" you're thinking about.
The answer provided by #jondinham does work perfectly for me. So I work out my own solution.
1.Problems I met with previous solution
Running on Windows 10 home edition 1909., I get two extra unexpected Windows "Calculator" and "Setting".
In addition, windows of Tencent QQ can not be detected, because the following fails:
// the following removes some task tray programs and "Program Manager"
ti.cbSize = sizeof(ti);
GetTitleBarInfo(hwnd, &ti);
if(ti.rgstate[0] & STATE_SYSTEM_INVISIBLE)
return FALSE;
However, I think the bug may be resulted by the particularity of Tencent QQ, I can not even make its' window TOPMOST with DeferWindowPos.
Perhaps someone can help me figure out why this happened and help improving the previous solution by #jondinham.
2.My Solution
I tried to examing the icons of the windows, and filter out windows that does not have its own icon or uses the icon same as the system default. I use code snippets from answer and answer and do some modification. This solution works very well for me.
HICON get_windows_HICON_critical(HWND hwnd)
{
// Get the window icon
HICON icon = reinterpret_cast<HICON>(::SendMessageW(hwnd, WM_GETICON, ICON_SMALL, 0));
if (icon == 0) {
// Alternative method. Get from the window class
icon = reinterpret_cast<HICON>(::GetClassLongPtrW(hwnd, GCLP_HICONSM));
}
// Alternative method: get the first icon from the main module (executable image of the process)
if (icon == 0) {
icon = ::LoadIcon(GetModuleHandleW(0), MAKEINTRESOURCE(0));
}
// // Alternative method. Use OS default icon
// if (icon == 0) {
// icon = ::LoadIcon(0, IDI_APPLICATION);
// }
if(icon == ::LoadIcon(0, IDI_APPLICATION)){
// Filter out those with default icons
icon = 0;
}
return icon;
}
static BOOL CALLBACK enumWindowCallback(HWND hWnd, LPARAM lparam) {
int length = GetWindowTextLength(hWnd);
char* buffer = new char[length + 1];
GetWindowText(hWnd, buffer, length + 1);
std::string windowTitle(buffer);
// List visible windows with a non-empty title
if (IsWindowVisible(hWnd) && length != 0) {
HICON icon = get_windows_HICON_critical(hWnd);
if(icon!=0){
std::cout << hWnd << ": " << windowTitle << std::endl;
}
}
return TRUE;
}
3.Problems with my solution
My solution can not deal with Windows Store APP, according to this question.
For all people looking to find a way to remove Invisible windows like Settings or Microsoft Store from the list:
These windows are cloaked, meaning they still have the dwStyle WS_VISIBLE, but the user can't see them.
You can detect this using the function DwmGetWindowAttribute. The dwAttribute you want to get is DWMWA_CLOAKED (enum constant 14). Only if the value in pvAttribute after the method call is 0, the window is not cloacked.
I have a windows application written in C++.
The application generates certain configuration files in a hidden directory.
I want to give user an option to open that directory from my application.
Clicking that option should open a windows explorer like dialog with an input directory location.
I spend time searching for a similar api, but end up with certain dialogs like "DlgDirListComboBoxW" or "GetOpenFileName" or "GetSaveFileName".
I am looking for an api to open normal Windows explorer like Dialog with an input directory location.
It would be really helpful if the api belongs to CommonDialogs section.
You can use the SHBrowseForFolder
It shows a dialog similar to this:
This is a example for how to use it:
BOOL GetFolder(LPCSTR folderpath,
LPCSTR szCaption,
HWND hOwner /*= NULL*/)
{
BOOL retVal = FALSE;
// The BROWSEINFO struct tells the shell
// how it should display the dialog.
BROWSEINFO bi;
memset(&bi, 0, sizeof(bi));
bi.ulFlags = BIF_USENEWUI;
bi.hwndOwner = hOwner;
bi.lpszTitle = szCaption;
// must call this if using BIF_USENEWUI
::OleInitialize(NULL);
// Show the dialog and get the itemIDList for the
// selected folder.
LPITEMIDLIST pIDL = ::SHBrowseForFolder(&bi);
if(pIDL != NULL)
{
// Create a buffer to store the path, then
// get the path.
char buffer[_MAX_PATH] = {'\0'};
if(::SHGetPathFromIDList(pIDL, buffer) != 0)
{
// Set the string value.
folderpath = buffer;
retVal = TRUE;
}
// free the item id list
CoTaskMemFree(pIDL);
}
::OleUninitialize();
return retVal;
}
How about:
HWND hWndOwner = NULL;
ShellExecute(
hWndOwner,
_T("explore"),
_T("c:\\some\\path"),
NULL,
NULL,
SW_SHOWNORMAL);
You can set hWndOwner to your main window handle if you're so inclined and can choose from a variety of other options.
For more information and usage details, check out the MSDN page on ShellExecute.
I'm currently using SHBrowseForFolder() to open a browse folder window but how do I return focus to my main window when Cancel / OK is pressed. I read that I should re-enable my main window before the dialog closes but where is that exactly? Any thoughts?
void buttonPush(HWND hWnd) {
EnableWindow(hWnd, FALSE);
BROWSEINFO bi = { 0 };
TCHAR szDir[MAX_PATH] = { 0 };
LPITEMIDLIST pid = NULL;
LPMALLOC pMalloc = NULL;
if (SUCCEEDED(SHGetMalloc(&pMalloc)))
{
ZeroMemory(&bi,sizeof(bi));
bi.hwndOwner = NULL;
bi.pszDisplayName = NULL;
bi.pidlRoot = NULL;
bi.ulFlags = BIF_RETURNONLYFSDIRS | BIF_STATUSTEXT | BIF_USENEWUI;
bi.lpfn = BrowseCallbackProc;
pidl = SHBrowseForFolder(&bi);
if (pidl)
{
// Folder selected in dialog
pMalloc->Free(pidl);
}
pMalloc->Release();
}
EnableWindow(hWnd, TRUE);
}
Instead of enabling and disabling your main window, just set bi.hwndOwner = hWnd; Then it will enable and disable automatically.
EnableWindow(hWnd, false);
This goes wrong because you are helping too much. When the dialog closes, there is no window left in your application that can still receive the focus. Your hWnd is still disabled, it doesn't get enabled until later. So the Windows window manager is forced to find another window to give the focus to. That will be the window of another app. Inevitably your window will disappear behind it.
Delete the EnableWindow() calls. That is enough, but you can tell the dialog about your window so it won't have to guess at it, useful if your window isn't the active window for some reason:
bi.hwndOwner = hWnd;
I'm trying to create functionality of the shell context menus despite them being blocked by a group policy for no real reason. One thing this demands is which icon the user is actually right-clicking, or if they are just clicking the desktop. The same thing also applies to explorer windows, although the desktop is where I'm planning on starting.
So far I can get the context menu to show for a specific file with a literal path. I found a nice list of interfaces on msdn, but none of the desktop-related ones I could find had any way of getting the desktop item like this. The closest match I could find was IActiveDesktop::GetDesktopItem with going through every single item and seeing whether the position matches, and then assuming none were clicked if none match.
This approach brings up two new issues, though. Firstly, I'm not sure how to go through every icon. Secondly, I have no clue how to convert this to a PIDL.
Also, even if I got the icons working, how would I extend this to the shell context menu for just the desktop?
Here's the code I use for a specific file:
#define _WIN32_WINNT _WIN32_WINNT_WINXP //going to be using on XP, tested on 7
#include <windows.h> //main header
#include <shellapi.h> //shell headers
#include <shlobj.h>
#include "G:\programming\v1\winwrap.h" //used for the window to display menu on
LPCONTEXTMENU cm; //holds context menu
msgproc (rproc) //this is called when right mouse button is depressed on window
{
//This function shows the context menu of the program on this window
//hwnd() is the HWND of the window involved with the right click
HMENU hMenu = CreatePopupMenu();
DWORD Flags = CMF_EXPLORE;
cm->QueryContextMenu(hMenu, 0, 1, 0x7FFF, Flags);
POINT pt;
GetCursorPos(&pt);
int Cmd = TrackPopupMenu(hMenu, TPM_LEFTALIGN | TPM_LEFTBUTTON | TPM_RIGHTBUTTON | TPM_RETURNCMD, pt.x, pt.y, 0, hwnd(), 0);
CMINVOKECOMMANDINFO ci;
if (Cmd)
{
ci.lpVerb = MAKEINTRESOURCE(Cmd - 1);
ci.lpParameters = "";
ci.lpDirectory = "";
ci.nShow = SW_SHOWNORMAL;
cm->InvokeCommand(&ci);
}
}
int main()
{
Window win; //create window for menu to go on, can be invisible, fullscreen later
win.addmsg (WM_RBUTTONUP, rproc); //handle message with previous function
WCHAR fname [MAX_PATH] = L"C:\\Users\\Chris\\Desktop\\context.exe"; //full path
WCHAR path [MAX_PATH] = L"C:\\Users\\Chris\\Desktop"; //path part
WCHAR name [MAX_PATH] = L"context.exe"; //filename part
LPSHELLFOLDER desktopFolder; //get desktop shell folder
SHGetDesktopFolder (&desktopFolder);
LPITEMIDLIST pidl; //tried using this for no icon by changing GetUIObjectOf to this pild to no avail
DWORD eaten;
desktopFolder->ParseDisplayName (0, 0, path, &eaten, &pidl, 0);
LPSHELLFOLDER parent;
desktopFolder->BindToObject (pidl, 0, IID_IShellFolder, (void **)&parent);
LPITEMIDLIST localPidl; //file pidl
parent->ParseDisplayName (0, 0, name, &eaten, &localPidl, 0);
parent->GetUIObjectOf (0, 0, (LPCITEMIDLIST *)&localPidl, IID_IContextMenu, 0, (void **)&cm); //gets context menu
messageLoop(); //window message loop
}
Any help is very appreciated.
In VC++, I use EnumWindows(...), GetWindow(...), and GetWindowLong(), to get the list of windows and check whether the window is top window (no other window as owner), and whether the window is visible (WS_VISIBLE). However, although my desktop is showing only 5 windows, this EnumWindows is giving me 50 windows, how funny! Any Windows geek here please help me clarify...
The way to list out only windows in taskbar (or similarly in Alt-Tab box) is described by Raymond in this article on MSDN blog:
Which windows appear in the Alt+Tab list?
And this is the super function to check whether a window is shown in alt-tab:
BOOL IsAltTabWindow(HWND hwnd)
{
TITLEBARINFO ti;
HWND hwndTry, hwndWalk = NULL;
if(!IsWindowVisible(hwnd))
return FALSE;
hwndTry = GetAncestor(hwnd, GA_ROOTOWNER);
while(hwndTry != hwndWalk)
{
hwndWalk = hwndTry;
hwndTry = GetLastActivePopup(hwndWalk);
if(IsWindowVisible(hwndTry))
break;
}
if(hwndWalk != hwnd)
return FALSE;
// the following removes some task tray programs and "Program Manager"
ti.cbSize = sizeof(ti);
GetTitleBarInfo(hwnd, &ti);
if(ti.rgstate[0] & STATE_SYSTEM_INVISIBLE)
return FALSE;
// Tool windows should not be displayed either, these do not appear in the
// task bar.
if(GetWindowLong(hwnd, GWL_EXSTYLE) & WS_EX_TOOLWINDOW)
return FALSE;
return TRUE;
}
Credited to the source code here:
http://www.dfcd.net/projects/switcher/switcher.c
The windows that you are talking about, with an X button and a title bar, etc. are not the only kind of windows. Buttons, dropdown menus, labels, icons, text boxes, the task bar, and just about everything else is a window too1. So EnumWindows is doing exactly what it's supposed to do: enumerate all the top level windows.
1 Even though this is true, EnumWindows only enumerates the top level windows. That means it won't enumerate any child windows:
The EnumWindows function does not enumerate child windows, with the exception of a few top-level windows owned by the system that have the WS_CHILD style.
However, many things on your desktop are windows as well, not just the "windows" you're thinking about.
The answer provided by #jondinham does work perfectly for me. So I work out my own solution.
1.Problems I met with previous solution
Running on Windows 10 home edition 1909., I get two extra unexpected Windows "Calculator" and "Setting".
In addition, windows of Tencent QQ can not be detected, because the following fails:
// the following removes some task tray programs and "Program Manager"
ti.cbSize = sizeof(ti);
GetTitleBarInfo(hwnd, &ti);
if(ti.rgstate[0] & STATE_SYSTEM_INVISIBLE)
return FALSE;
However, I think the bug may be resulted by the particularity of Tencent QQ, I can not even make its' window TOPMOST with DeferWindowPos.
Perhaps someone can help me figure out why this happened and help improving the previous solution by #jondinham.
2.My Solution
I tried to examing the icons of the windows, and filter out windows that does not have its own icon or uses the icon same as the system default. I use code snippets from answer and answer and do some modification. This solution works very well for me.
HICON get_windows_HICON_critical(HWND hwnd)
{
// Get the window icon
HICON icon = reinterpret_cast<HICON>(::SendMessageW(hwnd, WM_GETICON, ICON_SMALL, 0));
if (icon == 0) {
// Alternative method. Get from the window class
icon = reinterpret_cast<HICON>(::GetClassLongPtrW(hwnd, GCLP_HICONSM));
}
// Alternative method: get the first icon from the main module (executable image of the process)
if (icon == 0) {
icon = ::LoadIcon(GetModuleHandleW(0), MAKEINTRESOURCE(0));
}
// // Alternative method. Use OS default icon
// if (icon == 0) {
// icon = ::LoadIcon(0, IDI_APPLICATION);
// }
if(icon == ::LoadIcon(0, IDI_APPLICATION)){
// Filter out those with default icons
icon = 0;
}
return icon;
}
static BOOL CALLBACK enumWindowCallback(HWND hWnd, LPARAM lparam) {
int length = GetWindowTextLength(hWnd);
char* buffer = new char[length + 1];
GetWindowText(hWnd, buffer, length + 1);
std::string windowTitle(buffer);
// List visible windows with a non-empty title
if (IsWindowVisible(hWnd) && length != 0) {
HICON icon = get_windows_HICON_critical(hWnd);
if(icon!=0){
std::cout << hWnd << ": " << windowTitle << std::endl;
}
}
return TRUE;
}
3.Problems with my solution
My solution can not deal with Windows Store APP, according to this question.
For all people looking to find a way to remove Invisible windows like Settings or Microsoft Store from the list:
These windows are cloaked, meaning they still have the dwStyle WS_VISIBLE, but the user can't see them.
You can detect this using the function DwmGetWindowAttribute. The dwAttribute you want to get is DWMWA_CLOAKED (enum constant 14). Only if the value in pvAttribute after the method call is 0, the window is not cloacked.