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How to pass mouse events to applications behind mine in C#/Vista?

I am writing a very specialized app in C# that floats as a mostly transparent window over the entire desktop. I want to be able to create and pass mouse events to applications behind mine, and have them appear to operate "normally", responding to those events. It would also be preferable if the window manager could respond.

I am not a Windows guru, and am unsure of how to best accomplish this.

From this page: http://bytes.com/forum/thread270002.html

it would appear that mouse_event would be good, except that since my app is floating over everything else, I'm guessing my generated events would never make it to the other apps underneath.

It seems the alternative is SendMessage, but that requires a fair amount of manual manipulation of windows, and the mouse events generated aren't "authentic."

Any thoughts on the best way to approach this?

like image 270
Garth Avatar asked Oct 06 '08 08:10

Garth


3 Answers

After looking at System hooks and other low level solutions I found a much simpler method.

First, set the TransparencyKey and BackColor of the form to be the same. This didn't make any visual difference to me as my form was visually transparent already, but this will help in letting mouse events through.

Second, the following code will let mouse events "fall" through your form.

protected override CreateParams CreateParams
{
    get
    {
        CreateParams createParams = base.CreateParams;
        createParams.ExStyle |= 0x00000020; // WS_EX_TRANSPARENT

        return createParams;
    }
}

Lastly, set TopMost to be true.

Your form will now float on top of everything visually, but will give up focus to all other apps.

like image 154
Garth Avatar answered Oct 18 '22 15:10

Garth


Sounds like you want to do something like filtering user input.

Maybe you just need an keyboard/mouse hook.

You maybe want to take a look at the windows API call SetWindowsHookEx.

There should also be enough samples how to do that in C# available, the first thing i found was this link (maybe not the best article but should give you the idea).

like image 35
Fionn Avatar answered Oct 18 '22 14:10

Fionn


If you disable the control and return you're able to pass the MouseDown event to the parent.

like image 35
Kevin Parker Avatar answered Oct 18 '22 14:10

Kevin Parker