C# - on mouseover at taskbar, a preview is generated. how can i achieve this by C# coding

后端 未结 3 1822
慢半拍i
慢半拍i 2020-12-03 09:05

I am developing a winForm application in which i am list all the running processes. on mouseover of any process, i want preview window like (In Windows 7, when you mouse ove

相关标签:
3条回答
  • 2020-12-03 10:04

    full example at this site
    You need two functions :

    [DllImport("dwmapi.dll")]
    static extern int DwmRegisterThumbnail(IntPtr dest, IntPtr src, out IntPtr thumb);
    
    [DllImport("dwmapi.dll")]
    static extern int DwmUpdateThumbnailProperties(IntPtr hThumb, ref DWM_THUMBNAIL_PROPERTIES props);
    

    usage of DwmRegisterThumbnail
    you are at your form, and process it a external program that you want to paint at your program.

    IntPtr hWnd = process.MainWindowHandle;
    int i = DwmRegisterThumbnail(this.Handle, hWnd, out thumb);
    

    after registration, you just saying to windows the location to paint the picture

                DWM_THUMBNAIL_PROPERTIES props = new DWM_THUMBNAIL_PROPERTIES();
    
                props.fVisible = true;
                props.dwFlags = DWM_TNP_VISIBLE | DWM_TNP_RECTDESTINATION | DWM_TNP_OPACITY;
                props.opacity = 255;
                props.rcDestination = new Rect(panel.Left, panel.Top, panel.Right, panel.Bottom);
    
                DwmUpdateThumbnailProperties(thumb, ref props);
    
    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-12-03 10:04

    If you want your own application to display an Aero thumbnail, maybe this C++ sample could help you. Apparently it uses DwmRegisterThumbnail() to say "This HWND will now display a thumbnail of this other one".

    So, a little P/Invoke call and IWin32Window...

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-12-03 10:10

    You don't need to write any code to make this happen. It's part of the Aero theme, introduced with Windows Vista and still present in Windows 7. By default, a little thumbnail of the application's window is shown when you hover over its icon in the taskbar. That's true for the Skype example you showed, and also for a C# application that you write yourself.

    If you want a finer level of control over exactly what gets shown in the preview (like if you only wanted to show a small portion of your app's window), you can write some code that calls one or more of the relevant DWM API functions.

    But don't write all of the P/Invoke code yourself. Use one of the existing libraries that wraps it all up in a .NET friendly way, like Windows Forms Aero or the Windows API Code Pack.

    0 讨论(0)
提交回复
热议问题