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Themed RichTextBox - A RichTextBox with XP-styled bordersBy Bernhard ElblAn article about XP-theming. |
C#.NET 1.1, .NET 2.0, WinXPVS.NET2003, VS2005, Dev
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In this article, I will show you how to apply XP-styles to a RichTextBox. The only thing I do here is to derive from the RichTextBox and add support for XP-themed border style. The control is able to run on .NET 1.1 and .NET 2.0.
Visual Styles are not fully supported in NET 1.1. There is a bug in the Application.EnableVisualStyles method, and some controls do not render the XP-styles correctly. Here is a good overview about what is going wrong in NET 1.1: VisualStyles. But now we have NET 2.0 and all these bugs are fixed, and nearly all controls render with XP-styles. The only exception is the RichTextBox control. So I decided to write this article.
Normally, in NET, all paintings are done in the OnPaint or OnPaintBackground methods of a control. The problem is, inside these methods, you always draw to the client area (ClientRectangle) of a control. However, the borders are drawn outside this area in the window frame that should be drawn during the WM_NCPAINT message. For a better understanding, look at this illustration...

When we customize the window frame, we must filter some messages and process them.
WM_NCPAINT message tells us that the border should be redrawn.
WM_NCCALCSIZE message tells us that the client area should be calculated. /// <summary>
/// Filter some message we need to draw the border.
/// </summary>
protected override void WndProc(ref Message m)
{
switch(m.Msg)
{
case NativeMethods.WM_NCPAINT:
// the border painting is done here.
WmNcpaint(ref m);
break;
case NativeMethods.WM_NCCALCSIZE:
// the size of the client area is calcuated here.
WmNccalcsize(ref m);
break;
default:
base.WndProc (ref m);
break;
}
}
To find out if we should render an application with visual styles, is not an easy task. There are three things to consider.
After Googling around in the web, I found a method that does the job: IsVisualStylesEnabled Revisited.
To draw in the window frame, we need some Win32-APIs to get the corresponding device context (DC).
GetWindowDC to get the device context of the window frame.
GetWindowRect to get the rectangle of the window frame.
ExcludeClipRect to exclude the client area of the window frame.
ReleaseDC to release the DC. Here are the declarations in C#:
[DllImport("user32.dll")]
public static extern IntPtr GetWindowDC(IntPtr hWnd);
[DllImport("user32.dll")]
public static extern int ReleaseDC(IntPtr hWnd, IntPtr hDC);
[DllImport("user32.dll")]
public static extern bool GetWindowRect(IntPtr hWnd, out RECT lpRect);
[DllImport("gdi32.dll")]
public static extern int ExcludeClipRect(IntPtr hdc,
int nLeftRect, int nTopRect, int nRightRect, int nBottomRect);
Drawing visual styles is provided through the uxTheme.dll. We only need a few functions to draw the border.
OpenThemeData to get a theme handle.
GetThemeBackgroundContentRect to retrieve the size of the border.
DrawThemeBackground draws the border.
CloseThemeData releases the theme handle. Here are the declarations in C#.
[DllImport("uxtheme.dll", ExactSpelling=true, CharSet=CharSet.Unicode)]
public static extern IntPtr
OpenThemeData(IntPtr hWnd, String classList);
[DllImport("uxtheme", ExactSpelling=true)]
public extern static Int32 GetThemeBackgroundContentRect(IntPtr hTheme,
IntPtr hdc, int iPartId, int iStateId,
ref RECT pBoundingRect, out RECT pContentRect);
[DllImport("uxtheme", ExactSpelling=true)]
public extern static Int32 DrawThemeBackground(IntPtr hTheme,
IntPtr hdc, int iPartId, int iStateId,
ref RECT pRect, IntPtr pClipRect);
[DllImport("uxtheme.dll", ExactSpelling=true)]
public extern static Int32 CloseThemeData(IntPtr hTheme);
The .NET Framework 2.0 contains new classes for drawing visual styles. You can find them in the System.Windows.Forms.VisualStyles namespace. Also a method to check, if visual styles are enabled, is available in the new framework. Look for the Application.RenderWithVisualStyles property. However, I had not made two versions, because I think having one version for both is less to do on modifications and thus the better solution.
MultiLine is set to false.
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Last Updated: 11 Oct 2006 Editor: Smitha Vijayan |
Copyright 2006 by Bernhard Elbl Everything else Copyright © CodeProject, 1999-2009 Web15 | Advertise on the Code Project |