How to draw outside a window? - windows

Looking at a Windows tooltips class hint window, i see that it draws its drop-shadow outside the hint window's actual rectangle.
Using SpyXX - i can get the tooltip's window rect, and class styles:
Rectangle: (440, 229)-(544, 249), 104x20
Restored Rect: (440, 229)-(544, 249), 104x20
Client Rect: (0, 0)-(104, 20), 104x20
You'll notice that the drop shadow you see is physically outside the window that's being drawn. How can i draw a shadow outside around my window, while being outside my window?
Note: The shadow is not drawn using the standard CS_DROPSHADOW class style. i've confirmed this experimentally, and can also see the class style's for the window in SpyXX; it does not use CS_DROPSHADOW:
Windows Styles: 94000001
WS_POPUP 80000000
WS_VISIBLE 10000000
WS_CLIPSIBLINGS 4000000
TTS_ALWAYSTIP 1
Extended Styles: 00080088
WS_EX_LAYERED 80000
WS_EX_TOOLWIN 80
WS_EX_TOPMOST 8
So how can i draw outside my window?
Note: Trying to draw on the desktop DC is out. From Greg Schechter's Redirecting GDI, DirectX, and WPF applications:
Drawing To and Reading From the Screen
-- Baaaad!
Lastly, since we're on the redirection
topic, one particularly dangerous
practice is writing to the screen,
either through the use of GetDC(NULL)
and writing to that, or attempting to
do XOR rubber-band lines, etc. There
are two big reasons that writing to
the screen is bad:
It's expensive... writing to the
screen itself isn't expensive, but it
is almost always accompanied by
reading from the screen because one
typically does read-modify-write
operations like XOR when writing to
the screen. Reading from the video
memory surface is very expensive,
requires synchronization with the DWM,
and stalls the entire GPU pipe, as
well as the DWM application pipe.
It's unpredictable... if you somehow
manage to get to the actual primary
and write to it, there can be no
predictability as to how long what you
wrote to the primary will remain on
screen. Since the UCE doesn't know
about it, it may get cleared in the
next frame refresh, or it may persist
for a very long time, depending on
what else needs to be updated on the
screen. (We really don't allow direct
writing to the primary anyhow, for
that very reason... if you try to
access the DirectDraw primary, for
instance, the DWM will turn off until
the accessing application exits)

You can't draw outside your window in the manner you describe.
If you right click your desktop then go to properties/appearance/effects and uncheck 'Show shadows under menus' ... you will no longer have the shadow.
Bottom line is that this is a product of the window manager not your program.

Q: How do you draw outside of one window? A: Draw inside another window!
First thing to note is that the tooltip class actually does use the CS_DROPSHADOW style - but note that this is a class style, not a window style, so you have to look at the Class tab in the Spy++ properties dialog to find it. You'll see that the tooltips_class32 windows does indeed have this - and a few others.
But that just leads to the next question - how does that work? Well, it seems that Windows implements this by creating a helper HWND to draw the shadow - presumably it's creating another popup window the same size and shape as the one it's shadowing, filling it with gray, placing it directly underneath the main window, and setting it as a WS_EX_LAYERED window so that the shadow can be transparent and fade out around the edges using alpha-blending. And there's nothing to stop you from using the same or similar techniques yourself if you want to add a different type of shadow effect to one of your own windows.
So, long story short: if you want to draw outside of your own window, create a helper transparent window in the general area that you want to draw on, and draw on that helper window instead.
--
Now, if you try to find one of these helper shadow windows in Spy++, you won't find much. Unlike the tooltip_class32 windows, which are long-lived and just hide/show themselves as needed, these shadow windows are a more elusive creature: they are only created for as long as needed, so you'd have to refresh Spy++ while there's a tooltip or popup menu or other window using the shadow present - and that's tricky, since most tooltips and menus will disappear as soon as you move the mouse to switch to Spy++. But it turns out that the tooltips on Spy++'s own toolbar will stick around: so start Spy++, hover over an item in the toolbar, and hit F5 to refresh the HWND tree while the tooltip and shadow are present. Now scroll down, and you should see the third and fourth visible HWNDs in the tree are the tooltip itself, and right after that, a SysShadow window. Unfortunately, since the tooltip and shadow have by now disappeared, if you attempt to get the properties dialog for that HWND, you'll get a get a blank property dialog with an 'Invalid Window' message. If you really want to poke around and see how that SysShadow works, what styles it itself uses and so on, you could create a target app with a long-lived popup that uses CS_DROPSHADOW that you can then explore in Spy++ at leisure.
(Finally, note that these shadows are a completely different thing than the shadows that you see when one app window is on top of another above another since Vista: this type of shadow is part of Aero Glass mode, and handled by the same Desktop Composition Manager that adds the glass titlebar effect, and it doesn't use or need helper windows to implement the shadows.)

I wouldn't be surprised if that shadow is intimately tied to the window manager itself; it is after all the window manager who decides what window gets to paint which parts of itself and when it can do it. I don't see it as rocket science to paint that shadow if control over all that is gained, which the window manager has.

Related

Win32 Dialog box: how to keep all objects in windows centered when resizing

I am building and maintaining a Win32 app using Visual Studio.
I have recently edited the .rc file adding WS_THICKFRAME to my dialog STYLE line for all dialog windows to allow them to be resizable.
My current problem is, when I resize a window, its content remains fixed to the left. How can I make the window's content remain centered when resizing using the border?
Pointing to any relevant documentation on this would also be helpful, as I have not had lucky finding that.
If you only want to reposition (rather than resize) the individual controls, an easy way would be to create a non-modal container dialog to hold the controls, make that dialog a child of the resizable dialog, and then when you handle WM_SIZE for the outer dialog, you only have to reposition that one non-modal dialog.
Your new position is ((newWidth- controlDlgWidth) / 2, (newHeight-controlDlgHeight)/2), where controlDlgWidth, controlDlgHeight are the width and height of the child dialog.
I say to use a non-modal dialog for this, so that you can continue using a resource script, rather than needing to add a whole bunch of explicit CreateWindow() calls.

Draw NSWindow on one screen only

Let's say we have two screen scenario and a NSWindow,
positioned at the edge of screen 1.
A part of that of that window is also shown on screen 2.
What I would like to achieve, is to draw the window only on screen 1 and to not show the rest on screen 2.
The reason for that is that's some kind of a specially behaving mini window, not a usual one.
Is it possible to assign a certain NSScreen to draw the window on, only?
Two very different approaches:
Use Mavericks: What you looking for sounds like the behaviour of Mavericks' "screens have separate spaces" mode. In this mode a window is never drawn on two screens except during drag operations, at other times the window is draw on one screen with any areas protruding onto adjacent screens clipped. So if you can restrict use to 10.9 this may save you some work.
Borderless Windows: You can create a borderless non-opaque NSWindow, just set the appropriate flags. This is how applications create non-square windows, the visible area of the window is now entirely up to you. Now just clip your drawing to the area on one screen using the standard clipping support. You won't have a standard title bar or controls, unless you emulate them yourself, so you have to implement drag yourself etc. You say you have "some kind of a specially behaving mini window, not a usual one" so that may not be an issue.
Not that I've heard of.
What you could do though is restricting the position of the window e.g. via a NSWindowDelegate and windowDidMove: to listen to position changes and reposition the window appropriately.

DirectX Window & Windows Basic Causes Drawing Artifacts

I have an app that creates 1 or more windows. These windows are Direct3D contexts, in which I do rendering.
When Windows has hardware acceleration turned on for the desktop (Aero), everything renders fine. I can move the window around without issue.
If I switch the Windows theme to Windows Basic, it's a disaster. The window renders properly, but if I drag the window around, it leaves a trail of the image behind it. Think of winning at Solitaire.
Any ideas what might be causing this. It's fine otherwise, but it seems to just draw all over everything as it's moved around.
The DirectX renderer is very simple. Clear, Select Texture, Select Vertex Buffer, Select Index Buffer, Draw.
Update
The window hierarchy for each window is as follows:
Parent Window, WS_EX_LAYERED and WS_POPUP. GDI+ draws a frame around the window.
Child Window, WS_EX_TOOLCHAIN and WS_POPUP | WS_CLIPSIBLINGS | WS_CLIPCHILDREN. DirectX draws into the child.
From what I've determined, if you aren't in a compositing mode, moving a DirectX window will do this. A lot of examples have the rendering code in the main loop, which means the PeakMessage hangs the renderer.
The solution is, before any MoveWindow call, detect whether compositing is enabled, via system version checking and DwmIsCompositionEnabled. If we can't composite, snapshot the rendered window, hide the DirectX window and draw the snapshot. Once movement is done, turn rendering back on.

Weird black pixels in the corners of CProgressCtrl controls

I have an MFC dialog (actual a dialog bar with in a dialog) that contains a progress bar with these strange black pixels in the corner. I have tried the following to remove them:
Change most of the border type styles and the transparent style of the control.
Override the OnEraseBkgnd in a class derived a CProgressCtrl.
Setting the background color of the control by PBM_SETBKCOLOR.
I have yet to find a way to remove these black pixel.
Here is an example of what it looks like:
It seems I have found the issue. When the progress bar performs its painting it was sending an WM_ERASEBKGND message to the dialog to get the background with which it would paint. Some how the DC brush origin was being messed up. Using the following code at the start of the function seems to have fixed the issue with no ill effects.
CRect rcClip;
pDC->GetClipBox(rcClip);
pDC->SetBrushOrg(-rcClip.left, -rcClip.top);
I've seen this occur when using ActiveX controls inside control containers that don't have a a window or proper Device Contexts (The VB6 frame control is one of these) but I'm not sure if the same problem applies to MFC windows and controls though.
Try making the control parent a normal static window.

Correct way to do transparent buttons in WINAPI

How do you make the button with overrided WM_PAINT transparent. So that you could see the form through it in all places except where something is drawn. At the same time avoiding the flicker.
I saw examples with SetBkMode(HDC, TRANSPARENT), using NULL_BRUSH, examples with CompatibleDC and BitBlts, but I'm not quite sure which is the correct way to go, and also, how it behaves when WM_CLIPCHILDREN is set on the parent window. Most of the experiments I did had some weird behavior as well. Can't find a good documentation on WM_ERASEBKGND/WM_CTLCOLOR/WM_PAINT/WS_EX_COMPOSITED/WS_CLIPCHILDREN/etc internal relations on MSDN at all.
Does anyone know where I could read about this topic with all the gotchas associated?
mmm, I've never found anything close to a authoritative document on this topic.
This just serves as my rather random memory dump trying to get controls to "play nice", when animated, on a window that was either skinned (normal non client area with a bitmap background), layered (to get a window with custom non client edges with drop shadow effects) or with extended Aero Glass (via the DwmExtendFrameIntoClient) effects.
SetBKMode(... TRANSPARENT) just ensures that text rendering does not fill in the background of the text with the current bk color.
WS_EX_COMPOSITED causes windows to paint the parent and all child windows to a back buffer when the parent is invalidated, and then paint the back buffer. This is flicker free, but NT 6.0 introduced the desktop window manager which does not honor WS_EX_COMPOSITED.
WS_CLIPCHILDREN prevents the child windows and the parent window painting the same area twice. But is contra indicated if you need to use group boxes, or tab controls.
WS_CLIPSIBLINGs could be useful if child windows overlap and cause flicker. again this style is useless if you need to use group boxes or tab controls.
The other problem with WS_CLIPCHILDREN is you can't paint a background in the parent widnows window proc and rely on a NULL brush to reveal the skin. You can return a brush from WM_CTLCOLORxxx messages to coerce some of the standard controls to paint their background with your skin bitmap.
WS_EX_LAYERED is another style that makes windows buffer the painting of your parent window. But the layered windows painter does not paint child windows at all, so you need to manually paint the child windows by sending WM_PRINTCLIENT messages. Not all controls support this message.
WPF gets around the lack of back buffered painting and alpha support by not creating actual child windows at all for its buttons.
Final take on the situation:
With a little work you can get a skin behind most standard controls easily. WS_CLIPCHILDREN and no background painting on the parent will mimimize flicker. Handle WM_CTLCOLORxxx to fill the background on the controls.
If you are using Group Boxes or TabControls to frame other controls you absolutely must get the Z-order correct if using WS_CLIPSIBLINGS.
By sending controls WM_PRINTCLIENT messages, and some subclassing, you can get standard controls to paint onto a DIBSection, which you can then manually (or use DWM worker functions) repair the alpha channel of, and then paint onto a layered window, or a window with extended aero glass. This is even flicker free, but controls that don't support WM_PRINTCLIENT, or frequently update themselves outside of WM_PAINT, will not display correctly.

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