Microsoft KB Archive/147659

= How To Get a Window Handle Without Specifying an Exact Title =

Article ID: 147659

Article Last Modified on 10/11/2006

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APPLIES TO


 * Microsoft Visual Basic 5.0 Control Creation Edition
 * Microsoft Visual Basic 5.0 Learning Edition
 * Microsoft Visual Basic 5.0 Professional Edition
 * Microsoft Visual Basic 5.0 Enterprise Edition
 * Microsoft Visual Basic 4.0 Standard Edition
 * Microsoft Visual Basic 4.0 Professional Edition
 * Microsoft Visual Basic 4.0 32-Bit Enterprise Edition

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This article was previously published under Q147659



SUMMARY
The Visual Basic AppActivate command can only activate a window if you know the exact window title. Similarly, the Windows FindWindow function can only find a window handle if you know the exact window title.

This article demonstrates how to search for a window that has a title that is like the title you specify -- but not an exact match. The sample code searches through the available windows, comparing the window titles to a pattern by using the Visual Basic Like operator. You can also use the sample code to find a window based on its class name or ID. This can be extremely helpful when you need to send keystrokes to other Applications.



FindWindowLike Function
The sample code provides a find window function named FindWindowLike. FindWindowLike does a recursive search for windows matching the description you give it. After completing the search, FindWindow returns the number of windows it found that match your description. It also returns the window handles in an array that you pass to it. Once you have a window handle, you can call many Windows API functions to manipulate it. For example, you could set the focus to it, or move it. The example in this article shows how to set the focus.

Parameters Passed to FindWindowLike Function
The FindWindowLike function searches for windows based on the four parameters you pass it:

 The hWndStart parameter specifies the handle of the window you want to search under. For example, if you gave the handle to a Visual Basic form, FindWindowLike would search through all the controls on that form. If you pass 0 for hWndStart, FindWindowLike searches through all available windows. The WindowText parameter specifies the pattern used to compare window text. The Caption property of a Visual Basic Form is the same as the window text. The pattern is any string following the guidelines for the Visual Basic Like operator. The ClassName parameter specifies a pattern used to compare a window class name. A window's class name identifies the type of window. You can find out a window's class name by using the utility SPY.EXE that comes with Microsoft Visual C/C++, or you can use the example given in the following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:

112649 How To Get a Window's Class Name and Other Attributes



FindWindowLike uses the Visual Basic Like operator when comparing class names.

 The ID parameter specifies a specific child ID. This parameter is very useful for finding specific controls in a window. A window's ID can also be found by using SPY.EXE or the technique described in the following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:

112649 How to Get a Window's Class Name and Other Attributes

The ID parameter can be a decimal number or a hexadecimal string. If you use a hexadecimal string, prefix the hexadecimal number with &H. If you do not want to search for a specific ID, specify Null for the ID parameter.

FindWindowLike Examples and Their Results
Here are several example calls to FindWindowLike and the results it should return:


 * 1) r = FindWindowLike(hWnds, 0, "*", "*", Null)

Returns: All the available windows.
 * 1) r = FindWindowLike(hWnds, 0, "*Excel*", "*", Null)

Returns: All the windows with "Excel" in the window text.
 * 1) r = FindWindowLike(hWnds, 0, "Microsoft Excel*", "XLMAIN", Null)

Returns: All the windows having window text that begins with "Microsoft Excel" and that contains class name "XLMAIN"
 * 1) r = FindWindowLike(hWnds, Form1.Hwnd, "*", "*", "&HA1")

Returns: The child window of the Form1 window that has an ID of hexadecimal A1.
 * 1) r = FindWindowLike(hWnds, Form1.Hwnd, "*", "*", 2)

Returns: The child window of the Form1 window that has an ID of 2.

Uses for FindWindowLike
The FindWindowLike function can be especially powerful when used in a series of searches. For example, you can search once to find an open instance of the PIF Editor that comes with Microsoft Windows. Then once you have the handle to the PIF Editor window, you can search again for a specific control's window handle by using the PIF Editor's window handle and the ID of the control's window. Here is an example:

r = FindWindowLike(hWnds, 0, "PIF Editor*", "Pif", Null)

' Assuming the previous returned at least one handle

r = FindWindowLike(hWnds, hWnds(1), "*", "*", 103)

After you have the control's window handle, you can give it the focus and send it keystrokes. In addition, there are a lot of other things you can do once you have a window's handle.

Sample Code
The sample code listed in the example below uses several Windows API functions to accomplish what was described above. Here are the key ones including descriptions of their uses:


 * GetDeskTopWindow gets the handle to the DeskTop window when 0 (zero) is passed as the hWndStart, so you can use it as a starting point for the recursive search.
 * GetWindow gets a window handle based on a relationship to another window handle, so you can use it to get child windows and their siblings.
 * GetWindowText gets the text of a window for comparison to the passed WindowText.
 * GetClassName gets a window's class name, which you can compare to the passed ClassName.
 * GetWindowLong gets information about a window. The sample code uses it to get the ID number of a window for comparison with the passed ID.

Step-by-Step Example
 Start a new Standard EXE project. Form1 is created by default.</li> Add three Text boxes (Text1, Text2, and Text3) to Form1.</li>  Put the following code in the Form1 click event: Private Sub Form_Click Static hWnds As Variant ' Find window with title "Form1": r = FindWindowLike(hWnds, 0, "Form1", "*", Null) If r = 1 Then Debug.Print "Found "; Hex(hWnds(1)) ' Find a child window of "Form1" with ID=2: ' Notice that the handle from the first search is used. r = FindWindowLike(hWnds, hWnds(1), "*", "*", "&H00000002") If r = 1 Then Debug.Print "Found child "; Hex(hWnds(1)) Debug.Print "Setting focus to child ..." ' Set the focus to the child window with ID=2: hw = hWnds(1) r = SetFocusAPI(hw) ElseIf r > 1 Then ' This should not happen. Debug.Print "Found more than one child ID=2" Else Debug.Print "Did not find child ID=2" End If     ElseIf r > 1 Then Debug.Print "Found "; r; " Windows" End If     End Sub </li> From the Insert Menu select Module to add a new module to the project.</li>  Put the following code in the new module: Declare Function SetFocusAPI Lib "user32" Alias "SetForegroundWindow" _ (ByVal hwnd As Long) As Long Declare Function GetWindow Lib "user32" (ByVal hwnd As Long, _   ByVal wCmd As Long) As Long Declare Function GetDesktopWindow Lib "user32" As Long Declare Function GetWindowLW Lib "user32" Alias "GetWindowLongA" _ ByVal hwnd As Long, ByVal nIndex As Long) As Long  Declare Function GetParent Lib "user32" (ByVal hwnd As Long) As Long   Declare Function GetClassName Lib "user32" Alias "GetClassNameA" _    (ByVal hwnd As Long, ByVal lpClassName As String, _ ByVal nMaxCount As Long) As Long  Declare Function GetWindowText Lib "user32" Alias "GetWindowTextA" _    (ByVal hwnd As Long, ByVal lpString As String, ByVal cch As Long) _     As Long

Public Const GWL_ID = (-12) Public Const GW_HWNDNEXT = 2 Public Const GW_CHILD = 5 'FindWindowLike ' - Finds the window handles of the windows matching the specified '  parameters '  'hwndArray ' - An integer array used to return the window handles '  'hWndStart ' - The handle of the window to search under. ' - The routine searches through all of this window's children and their '  children recursively. ' - If hWndStart = 0 then the routine searches through all windows. '  'WindowText ' - The pattern used with the Like operator to compare window's text. '  'ClassName ' - The pattern used with the Like operator to compare window's class '  name. '  'ID   ' - A child ID number used to identify a window. ' - Can be a decimal number or a hex string. ' - Prefix hex strings with "&H" or an error will occur. ' - To ignore the ID pass the Visual Basic Null function. '  'Returns ' - The number of windows that matched the parameters. ' - Also returns the window handles in hWndArray '  '--   'Remove this next line to use the strong-typed declarations #Const WinVar = True #If WinVar Then Function FindWindowLike(hWndArray As Variant, _   ByVal hWndStart As Variant, WindowText As String, _     Classname As String, _  ID) As Integer Dim hwnd Dim r  Static level Static iFound #ElseIf Win32 Then Function FindWindowLike(hWndArray As Long, ByVal hWndStart As Long, _   WindowText As String, Classname As String, ID) As Long Dim hwnd As Long Dim r As Long ' Hold the level of recursion: Static level As Long ' Hold the number of matching windows: Static iFound As Long #ElseIf Win16 Then Function FindWindowLike(hWndArray As Integer, _   ByVal hWndStart As Integer, WindowText As String, _    Classname As String, ID) As Integer Dim hwnd As Integer Dim r As Integer ' Hold the level of recursion: Static level As Integer Hold the number of matching windows: Static iFound As Integer #End If  Dim sWindowText As String Dim sClassname As String Dim sID ' Initialize if necessary: If level = 0 Then iFound = 0 ReDim hWndArray(0 To 0) If hWndStart = 0 Then hWndStart = GetDesktopWindow End If  ' Increase recursion counter: level = level + 1 ' Get first child window: hwnd = GetWindow(hWndStart, GW_CHILD) Do Until hwnd = 0 DoEvents ' Not necessary ' Search children by recursion: r = FindWindowLike(hWndArray, hwnd, WindowText, Classname, ID) ' Get the window text and class name: sWindowText = Space(255) r = GetWindowText(hwnd, sWindowText, 255) sWindowText = Left(sWindowText, r)  sClassname = Space(255) r = GetClassName(hwnd, sClassname, 255) sClassname = Left(sClassname, r)  ' If window is a child get the ID: If GetParent(hwnd) <> 0 Then r = GetWindowLW(hwnd, GWL_ID) sID = CLng("&H" & Hex(r)) Else sID = Null End If  ' Check that window matches the search parameters: If sWindowText Like WindowText And sClassname Like Classname Then If IsNull(ID) Then ' If find a match, increment counter and ' add handle to array: iFound = iFound + 1 ReDim Preserve hWndArray(0 To iFound) hWndArray(iFound) = hwnd ElseIf Not IsNull(sID) Then If CLng(sID) = CLng(ID) Then ' If find a match increment counter and ' add handle to array: iFound = iFound + 1 ReDim Preserve hWndArray(0 To iFound) hWndArray(iFound) = hwnd End If  End If   Debug.Print "Window Found: " Debug.Print " Window Text  : " & sWindowText Debug.Print " Window Class : " & sClassname Debug.Print " Window Handle: " & CStr(hwnd) End If  ' Get next child window: hwnd = GetWindow(hwnd, GW_HWNDNEXT) Loop ' Decrement recursion counter: level = level - 1 ' Return the number of windows found: FindWindowLike = iFound End Function </li> Save the Project.</li> Run the code, and then click the form.</li></ol>

First, the program searches for Form1. If Form1 is found, the program searches Form1 for a control with an ID of 2. It should find one because Visual Basic numbers the IDs as you add controls. With three text boxes on Form1, one should have an ID of 2. After finding the control, the code sets the focus to the window by calling SetFocusAPI.

If you set the focus to one of your controls before clicking the Form, you should see the focus shift, always to the same control, when you click the form.

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