I have strange situation where my OS X application top menu no longer works and loses all control to the application. For example Command + Quit does not work, file menu does not work etc.
It does not happens always and mostly happens when system goes to sleep for long time or system restarted unexpectedly or app is running for long time like 2-3 days.
I have tried a lot to figure it out but no luck so far so may be i can find help here.
Regards,
MP.
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TL;DR Can I make a VB.net form visible on the Windows lock screen [i.e. when a user hits WIN+L]?
I wrote an alert system that notifies staff of a 'lockdown' in vb.net. This has been tested in drills a few times but today it was noted that the 'alert window' does not appear when the screen is locked.
The alert window does make an alarm sound, which can still be heard even when the computer is locked but this is dependant on the machine having speakers that are turned on...
The workstations are running Windows 7.
Edit
I am not looking to spawn a separate process, just get the 'lockdown.vb' form showing on top of the windows lock screen.
Googling this has just given me a load of tutorials on making a lockscreen...which is not what I'm after, hence the question. :-)
I have written a WinForms driver safety application for a windows tablet device that will blank the screen (display a full screen blank topmost window) when it detects that the car is moving at say more that 15km/h (using the tablets GPS).
The software has worked fine under Windows 7 but I'm struggling a bit to get it working under Windows 8. My first challenge is to display the blank screen when the Metro start menu is currently displayed. So if the user has the Metro start menu displayed and the car starts moving > 15 km/h my blank screen should display... I need to steal the focus from the metro interface and display my blank window on the desktop.
To test this I wrote a simple vb.net app in 2010. It had a form with a timer firing every 3 seconds. In the Tick event I had the code:
Beep()
Me.Activate()
When I ran this with the debugger and pressed the windows key to show the Metro Start Menu, it worked... The focus switched back to the desktop (and my window). However, when I ran this without the debugger and did the same thing I could hear the beeps but the focus never switched back to the desktop.
Any ideas why the behaviour would be different? Any ideas on how I replicate the same behaviour I get when the debugger is attached?
I have tried a few things like AppActivate, setting the form TopMost, BringToFront but unfortunately this hasn't worked.
The only half solution I have come up with is to send a windows button keystroke but this has other issues.
Windows specifically tries to prevent applications from stealing the foreground from other apps. See the SetForegroundWindow documentation for commentary on this and the factors that can let an application come to the foreground (all of the methods you are trying essentially come down to a SetForegroundWindow call).
Note that one of the explicit blocking circumstances is "The foreground process is not a Modern Application or the Start Screen."
This works for you when debugging because "The process is being debugged" is one of the cases which explicitly allows foreground privileges.
Because this is a generally user-unfriendly thing to do there isn't a good general purpose way to bypass this behaviour and steal the foreground.
Likewise, normal apps cannot run on top of Modern applications or the start screen.
You may be better off locking the system by calling the LockWorkStation function.
I am making a vim-style "window manager" that takes text input, much like Alfred or Spotlight in Mavericks (in a floating panel).
The problem I'm having is when I call activateWithOptions: on a running application it steals focus from my window. I was hoping the problem would be solved by simply bring my app to the foreground again, however it seems the activation is running on a separate thread, and I end up activating my app before the original app gets activated.
I have tried reactivating when I receive NSWorkspaceDidActivateApplicationNotification, but that doesn't work either.
Ideally I'd like to pause execution until the application is focused for multiple reasons, since that would be the window I manipulate further.
Does anyone have any suggestions?
I can't get WinPhone 7 SDK update v7.1.1 to install. It freezes my computer everytime I try to install, the mouse still work but after a while whole system locked up and I need to hold power button to turn it off. Looked at task manager and look like it freeze when configure the emulator. Tried several time, even reinstall Windows and still no luck. Anyone know a work around on this? I saw some others faced this problem but no solution.
When it freezes (in particular, when the spinning icon freezes), try hitting Ctrl+Alt+Del once. Two things can happen:
The first is that the machine will completely freeze within a minute or two, which will require a hard reboot.
The second is that the screen will flicker quickly, attempting to show the "Lock/Switch user/Sign out/Change password/Task manager" screen, and then will jump back to the setup screen. You'll then see the progress icon start spinning again, but it will hesitate several more times. It will either freeze the machine again (and if so, do a hard reboot and try again), or setup will eventually complete (which on my machine took no longer than 10 minutes).
I'm writing a simple Cocoa Application, no core data or multiple document support. Running on a Mac Pro, OS X 10.6.6, Xcode 3.2.3.
I have reduced my application to the following code in my AppDelegate class:
- (void)applicationDidFinishLaunching:(NSNotification *)aNotification
{
NSOpenPanel *openPanel = [NSOpenPanel openPanel];
[openPanel runModal];
return;
}
From within the debugger, I will run my application. As expected a somewhat not-to-useful OpenPanel will appear. I will click Cancel and it will disappear. All this is as expected. When I click [Command + Q] to Quit the application, the UI will go away but the debugger will indicate that the application is still running (as does the console output).
Based upon all the information I'm reading, I should not have to do anything else in order for this to run right. I've downloaded several examples on the Open Panel's usage but most use the deprecated methods of opening modal giving additional information as parameters. FWIW, I tried those methods and am still seeing the same result.
One last item, when the Open dialog appears, just for an instant I see a message box asking me something to the extent if I want my application to receive incoming connections. The dialog quickly disappears. I don't know if that is part of my problem or not. [Update - this deals with my Firewall being turned on.]
Yes, I'm fairly new at Objective C but not at programming in general. Any words of wisdom is greatly appreciated!
2011.02.07 - Update:
I have walked the debugger line by line without incident. There is no indication of any program failure in the console window.
I say that the debugger is still active after [Command + Q] because the Stop Process toolbar button is still enabled as is the Break button. Further the console indicates that after I tell the application to terminate (either via the menu or key command) that it is still running. The following is the Complete console output from start of run to after I Quit the application.
Program loaded.
run
[Switching to process 62370]
Running...
The Activity Monitor (system tool) will show my application terminating (no longer shows up as a process) but the Debugger will still not transition to "edit" mode - if I tell Xcode to run the debugger again, it will ask me if it's OK to Stop the current debugging session. If I was in Windows I would start looking for background threads keeping the process alive but as far as I know, NSOpenPanel should not be doing something like that.
I have further simplified the program to nothing more than creating a brand new Cocoa application and inserting the code snippet above - no other additions to the template project or updates in any way.
And lastly, when the application is run under the Leaks Performance Tool, everything runs fine when the panel is created but never used. When created and actually used though, at the end of the run I will get the following message in the tool "insufficient task_for_pid privileges (leakagent64)". Googling this hurts. If I read it right, the debugger does not have sufficient permissions to fully kill the target process ??? Now that sounds stupid but ... It does not make sense!
Another update - I just downloaded and ran FunHouse, one of the SDK sample applications that also uses NSOpenPanel. Well don't I feel special. It exhibits the same exact behavior. So from this I conclude either Apple has a bug in their code, my machine is special and messed up, and finally, it is Not my code that is at fault. That being the best part. Tomorrow, I will use a friends Mac and see if the same behavior is exhibited on his box.
This is just too weird.
I rebooted my box, took it to work and found it worked like a charm! I will assume this is fixed and has nothing to do with any other connected devices at home as compared to at work.
If it re-exhibits at home, then it is a network/device issue. Thanks all for your inputs and suggestions! Very much appreciated.
What, specifically, does the debugger say? It's possible that your program crashed, so the debugger is showing you information about the crash.
What if you omit any attempt to run an Open panel?