Difference between revisions of "Dragging windows"
From HashVB
m (Added declarations) |
m (Added VB6 header) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
+ | {{VB6}} | ||
So, you want to drag a window without using the real title bar? | So, you want to drag a window without using the real title bar? | ||
Revision as of 14:05, 9 November 2005
This article is based on Visual Basic 6. Find other Visual Basic 6 articles. |
So, you want to drag a window without using the real title bar?
I have seen lots of people using their own code in the mouse move event to do this, and I've even done it myself.
Until I found the following code:
Declare Function ReleaseCapture Lib "user32" () As Long Declare Function SendMessage Lib "user32" Alias "SendMessageA" _ (ByVal hWnd As Long, ByVal wMsg As Long, ByVal wParam As Long, _ lParam As Any) As Long Const WM_NCLBUTTONDOWN = &HA1 Const HTCAPTION = 2 ReleaseCapture SendMessage Form.hWnd, WM_NCLBUTTONDOWN, HTCAPTION, ByVal 0&
This should go in the mousedown event of the control/object you want to drag the window by.
It has various advantages over home grown code:
- It's faster and rarely suffers from flickering.
- It's easier. Two lines once compared to a huge routine (or two?)
- It obeys the windows rules and settings on drawing windows while moving.
If you want to use this to drag a control, just replace Form.hWnd with Control.hWnd. This will NOT work with windowless controls like Labels or ImageBoxes.