Capturing keys from IntPtr - vb.net

This question is related to Visual Basic .NET 2010
Hey. I need to capture keys from a window handle on my form. This is what my code does:
Use a webbrowser control to navigate to a website
Get window handle of an object on the webbrowser
user32.SetParent() to a new UserControl on my form
Now the object that initially was on the webbrowser is displayed in a control on my form, but any keys sent to that control don't register on the events .KeyDown() and .KeyUp().
So how do I capture the keys from the window handle?

Related

Get current Outlook Window as Form

How can I get the Outlook windows from which is the Ribbon button is called as Form in vb.net?
All callbacks (e.g. button click event handlers) receive IRibbonControl as the parameter. IRibbonControl.Context property can be cast to either Inspector or Explorer object depending on where the button is hosted.

Unable to access all the events in a VB web form using Visual Studio 2017 RC

When I create a Web Form a large chunk of the events for my objects are missing when I select the control.
Example: Button only has the Click event and Label has no events I can run.
When I created a Windows Form application, the events are all there. What can I do to get my events back?

CTRL+ TAB when webbrowser is in focus

I have a windows application with a tabcontrol. One of the tab of the tabcontrol has a webbrowser control.Now the issue that I am facing is when the focus is inside the webbrowser control, the normal Ctrl+Tab functionality of the tabcontrol is not working.I want the Ctrl+Tab to change the selected tab of tabcontrol even when the focus is inside webbrowser control in selected tab.How to achieve this ?
I have already tries overriding ProcessCmdKey.but it does not get hit when focus is inside webbrowser control.
I also tried registerhotkey method ,it works but it locks the Ctrl+Tab hotkey within my application & system doesn't respond to any other Ctrl+Tab presses outside my application when application is running, which is expected behaviour of registerhotkey.
Here is the code you need:
If WB.ContainsFocus Then
MsgBox("We have focus, disappearing...")
WB.Document.Body.RemoveFocus()
End If
Now, the question is, when to run that code. If you put it in the WebBrowser1_GotFocus event, you'll need to turn it on and off. Turn the code off if the user is interacting with the WB Control, and turn it back on when they are not and when you expect to be experiencing the problem you've mentioned.
Of course, you could add another line to ensure a particular control/tab/panel etc gets focus after you remove focus from the body. Also, here are 3 other SO questions that have answers which may help you, but these will take you in directions different to the direction I've provided, probably due to the fact that the questions are not identical to yours, but are similar enough to be useful (not listed in order of preference).
Prevent WebBrowser control from stealing focus?
Webbrowser steals focus
Focusing WebBrowser control in a C# application
UPDATE:
I just wanted to add, instead of the .Body.RemoveFocus() you could do this:
WB.Document.Body.Parent.RemoveFocus()
Which I prefer, since the .Document object didn't have an explicit .RemoveFocus method on the intellisense I was gettign in VS2012 RC. This is probably referring to the HTML tag (and not the .Document object) and since the html tag is the only parent to the body tag, it makes sense, and there is no "HTML" object directly available in the intellisense under object, since you can get it via other means, so it's just more convenient doing it this way.
Cheers, and let me know if you need more info on anything.

RaiseEvent from a UserControl that's placed on a UserControl that's on a Form

I have a Windows Form that contains a custom control container as a UserControl. For the sake of this question, this custom control container is called Dashboard. This container called Dashboard contains numerous other controls depending on their permissions. I need to raise events that are contained on these controls through the Dashboard control and over to the Windows Form.
How can I bubble up the event? I'm using VB.NET for this project, but can convert C# into VB.NET.
Also, to complicate matters, the main Windows Form is a VB6 project. So, I'm using the InteropFormsToolkit to accomplish this.
I figured it out. I just did what I had said that I wanted to do and created an event with a custom eventargs class and bubbled it up to the VB6 app. Each control needed to implement the custom event such as:
Public Event OnMyCustomEvent(source As Object, e As MyCustomEventArgs)
And continue raising that event up to VB6. In VB6 that event was exposed as a function for me to handle as necessary.

vb.net - problem making a call from one usercontrol to another form

I have a tabcontrol that creates tab pages from a "User Control" I created (a separate form in vb.net) using this code: (MainTab is the separate user control I created which has text boxes etc in it)
Dim tmpTab As New MainTab
myTabControl.TabPages.Add()
Dim tmpTabCount As Integer = myTabControl.TabPages.Count
myTabControl.TabPages.Item(tmpTabCount - 1).Controls.Add(tmpTab)
myTabControl.TabPages.Item(tmpTabCount - 1).Text = "Untitled"
I'm using the devexpress xtratab control so the code might look a bit different than the default vb.net tab control.
Now in my MainTab user control file file, I can't for the life of me figure out how to call a control in the form1 where the xtra tab control is placed on. "Me.Parent.Dispose" works for closing the tab when executed via the MainTab control, but that's as far as I can get for communicating with the parent from.
Does anyone know the solution? I'm not sure if I have to reference something in the MainTab user control or what in order to communicate with any objects on the default form1.
Generally speaking, I avoid making my child controls cognizant of the parent. It leads to unpleasant coupling more often than I care for.
Consider adding a custom event to your MainTab class that your form can subscribe to. When you want to pass a message to the form, your user control can invoke the method, and your form's event handler can process it accordingly. This pattern helps keep your user control pluggable into other forms by reducing its dependency on its parent.
Creating a user control event in a windows form is discussed in this MSDN article:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa302342.aspx