Getting the keyboard cursor location/coordinates in all applications - windows

Right now I'm using the functions GetCaretPos() and GetGUIThreadInfo() to get the current keyboard cursor/caret coordinates. These work properly in applications like Notepad and Wordpad and return the correct coordinates, but in applications such as Firefox, Thunderbird, and others, the coordinates returned are always 0, 0, no matter where the keyboard cursor is.
I know it's not impossible to get the keyboard cursor/caret coordinates in these applications because when I use the Yahoo KeyKey IME in them, it pops-up a dialog right where the keyboard cursor is positioned.
Problem is, since KeyKey is not open source, I have no idea how it's doing it.
If anyone could point me in the right direction or knows the correct function(s) to use it'd be much appreciated!

Related

How to get a print screen of the desktop without any windows or the taskbar?

My application is a Windows Forms one.
I tried using the windows wallpaper, but this depends on the "Fill", "Stretch", "Fit" or "Tile" settings.
I just need the image as it is on the desktop, but including the part "under" the taskbar, because this part is visible in case of transparent taskbar.
Why I need this?
Because I have a tray application which slides from under the taskbar when opening. And I need to set a mask there, so it can't be seen sliding, until it reaches the top of the taskbar. Again, this is only a problem when the taskbar is transparent.
I am not sure if I understood your question correctly. But to me, it seems that you need the image that has created wallpaper. If it seems easier, take a look at registry entries at following location:
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Control Panel\Desktop
This will give you the path, size, tile/no tile etc. information for the wallpaper.
There is a Win32 function called PaintDesktop you could try but unless I'm misunderstanding things you should be able to just adjust the height of your window so it is never really behind the taskbar...
Why I need this? Because I have a tray application which slides from under the taskbar when opening. And I need to set a mask there, so it can't be seen sliding, until it reaches the top of the taskbar. Again, this is only a problem when the taskbar is transparent.
The problem here is that you're starting the slide up from the bottom of the entire screen, rather than starting from the bottom of the screen's working area (i.e., the top of the taskbar). That's why you're seeing the pop-up window slide up behind a transparent taskbar.
Luckily, the solution is much simpler than obtaining the desktop background and/or doing any type of masking. It's also much faster, and it's always good that your eye candy isn't unnecessarily taxing the user's computer.
All you need to do is determine the coordinates of the screen's working area, which is defined by Windows as the area that can be used by applications, not including the taskbar and other side bars. You can obtain this information easily in WinForms by querying the Screen.PrimaryScreen.WorkingArea property. This will return a Rectangle that corresponds to the primary screen's working area. Since you know that the taskbar is always displayed on the primary screen, this is exactly what you want.
Once you have the coordinates of the primary screen's working area, start your pop-up window's slide from the bottom of that.*
This is a good lesson of why you should always include an explanation of why you want to accomplish something. There's often an even better way that you haven't thought of.
*Of course, I'm ignoring the fact that a user might not have their taskbar positioned at the bottom of the screen. You can put it on either side or even on top. It sounds to me like you haven't considered this in your question, either. If this is an app that you're writing only for yourself or for a controlled environment where you can be sure that no one has their taskbar in non-default positions, that might be OK. But if you're writing software to distribute to a wider audience, you will need to take this into account. The rcWork coordinates will be correct, regardless of where the taskbar is positioned, of course, but you will need to know whether to start the pop-up window's slide from the bottom, the left side, the right side, or the top.

Restrict mouse movement over a specified window handle

I'm looking to simulate a kiosk mode for Safari on Windows. OSX will not work with my input hardware and Chrome's GPU acceleration is too slow for the machine I'm using.
The only plausible solution [so far] is to run Safari and send an F11 (fullscreen) keystroke, but prevent the URL bar from expanding when the mouse reaches the top pixels of the screen.
I've looked and can't seem to find any good solution and would like to know if I can restrict the cursor movement from reaching the top pixel of the screen?
If anyone has any other solutions, that would be great!
You can use the ClipCursor function to do this.
Confines the cursor to a rectangular area on the screen. If a subsequent cursor position (set by the SetCursorPos function or the mouse) lies outside the rectangle, the system automatically adjusts the position to keep the cursor inside the rectangular area.
You can poll the cursor position and correct it using a timer, but this is not ideal. You could also cover the top bar by a transparent topmost window. This way, input will never reach the top bar.
EDIT: If Internet explorer is an option you have the possibility to use the COM object to embed what you need in a custom application. Other browsers might have similar APIs, but I'm not familiar with them.

Programmatically find blink cursor position in windows c++?

How to find out blink cursor position in windows, from c++? In many cases I need send button click on the position of the blinking cursor, but I didn't find any important function which will take care of that.
OS win 7(64), c++
It is called "caret", cursor is the mouse pointer. You use GetCaretPos() to get its position. But the returned position is relative to the client area of the window that owns the caret. Which probably means that you need to find that window first, use GetForegroundWindow() for that. And don't send button click messages, they are posted so use PostMessage().
Avoid all of this by just using SendInput().
Note that UIPI (the user interface component of UAC) prevents you from poking stuff into a window owned by an elevated process.
GetGUIThreadInfo() is probably your best bet; pass it with idThread = 0 to get the info from the currently active thread, and then check the rcCaret member of the returned GUITHREADINFO structure. You'll then need to use ClientToScreen() with the hwndCaret value to convert client-relative coordinates to screen coordinates.
Note that this only works for apps that use the Win32 caret functions - specifically SetCaretPos(). If an app draws its own caret without using these, you may not get anything meaningful back. (Some apps, like Word, draw their own caret, but still call SetCaretPos so that accessibility aids that need to track the caret can use this technique.)
The rectangle you get back can sometimes be wider than the actual caret. When a bitmap is used for the caret, as is the case for Right-To-Left or Left-To-Right carets that have a little 'flag' attached to the top, you'll get back a rectangle that's a bit wider than the actual caret area, and may need to adjust or otherwise figure out where within this area the actual caret bar is - it may or may not be in the exact middle. Looks like for Notepad++ you should be fine, though.

How can I get the screen position of the DockTile in OSX?

I need a window to 'point' to the icon that was clicked on in the dock, similar to the way the context menu has the little callout-arrow pointing to it. This means I need to get the screen location of the dock, or more accurately the DockTile. (Yes I could use the mouse coordinates, but that doesn't look as good as it 'moves'.)
Now my thought is to get the associated view (I already have that), then use view-to-screen coordinate conversions, but that's becoming problematic as the x/left and y/top values of the bounding rectangle always say zero. I know that's because there's a nested hierarchy of views as well. Problem is I've walked it and always end up hitting a road block.
So thoughts?
Mark
You can get the dock icon positions using the accessibility API, there's some excellent sample code and app from Apple here.

how to access current word in any program

Answers.com has a taskbar application that when you ALT + mouse-click on a word in any program it will pop up a window with information pulled from their website.
My question is-- what are the actual programming mechanics and APIs used to do something like this? I don't have Windows application programming experience and am trying to figure out where to start. How do you access the current word pointed to by the mouse?
Anyone aware of any examples or open source software that does anything like this?
It's been a while and the last time I did something like this it was within my own wysiwyg editor so I had full access to all font characteristics needed to calculate which word was clicked by the mouse.
Maybe there's a n easy way to do this if all your apps are .NET or com or share some other framework which provides a way to retrieve this directly.
Via the API, I would look into hooking the keyboard and mouse messages so that your app can pre-process every mouse click on other applications - start with SetWindowsHookEx and read everything you can about hooking messages.
After getting your app to pre-process the messages, you then need to grab the text being clicked. Since text can be painted onto a device context in many different ways, you may be best off doing a screen scrape of the clicked area because the text may only exist as a bitmap. If this is the case, you have to perform some OCR to translate the scraped bitmap back into text. In other cases, the text may reside in the window as text - the WM_GETTEXT message may return this text from some types of windows (e.g. textboxes, buttons, etc.) but for normal windows, this message only return the title in the caption bar.
Sorry I don't have any definite answer, but this may get you started in the right direction.

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