54

I've successfully created an app that minimizes to the tray using a NotifyIcon. When the form is manually closed it is successfully hidden from the desktop, taskbar, and alt-tab. The problem occurs when trying to start with the app minimized. At first the problem was that the app would be minimized but would still appear in the alt-tab dialog. Changing the FormBorderStyle to one of the ToolWindow options (from the "None" option) fixed this, but introduced another problem. When the app first starts the titlebar of the minimized window is visible just above the start menu:

enter image description here

Opening the form and the closing it causes it to hide properly. I've tried lots of variations, but here's essentially how it's working right now...

WindowState is set to Minimized in the Designer. After some initialization in the constructor I have the following lines:

this.Visible = false;
this.ShowInTaskbar = false;

When the NotifyIcon is double-clicked I have the following:

 this.WindowState = FormWindowState.Normal;
 this.Visible = true;
 this.ShowInTaskbar = true;

Like I said, I've tried lots of minor variations on this (this.Hide(), etc.). Is there a way to have the NotifyIcon be the primary component such that I can completely start and dispose of the form while leaving the NotifyIcon running? There's got to be a way to start the app with the form minimized without any of the weirdness. Please help me find it!

6 Answers 6

86

The right way to do this is to prevent the form from getting visible in the first place. That requires overriding SetVisibleCore(). Let's assume a context menu for the NotifyIcon with a Show and Exit command. You can implement it like this:

public partial class Form1 : Form {
    public Form1() {
        InitializeComponent();
        notifyIcon1.ContextMenuStrip = contextMenuStrip1;
        this.showToolStripMenuItem.Click += showToolStripMenuItem_Click;
        this.exitToolStripMenuItem.Click += exitToolStripMenuItem_Click;
    }

    private bool allowVisible;     // ContextMenu's Show command used
    private bool allowClose;       // ContextMenu's Exit command used

    protected override void SetVisibleCore(bool value) {
        if (!allowVisible) {
            value = false;
            if (!this.IsHandleCreated) CreateHandle();
        }
        base.SetVisibleCore(value);
    }

    protected override void OnFormClosing(FormClosingEventArgs e) {
        if (!allowClose) {
            this.Hide();
            e.Cancel = true;
        }
        base.OnFormClosing(e);
    }

    private void showToolStripMenuItem_Click(object sender, EventArgs e) {
        allowVisible = true;
        Show();
    }

    private void exitToolStripMenuItem_Click(object sender, EventArgs e) {
        allowClose = true;
        Application.Exit();
    }
}

Note a wrinkle with the Load event, it won't fire until the main form is first shown. So be sure to do initialization in the form's constructor, not the Load event handler.

3
  • Brilliant, thanks! Took a little tweaking to get it to work with my specific app, but it works great!
    – jluce50
    Nov 14, 2009 at 3:34
  • 7
    Small change in exit click handler, to not show form when exiting application from context menu when form was not showed, replace line if (!mLoadFired) Show(); with code: if (mLoadFired) Close(); else Application.Exit();
    – psulek
    Jan 18, 2012 at 8:38
  • 1
    The line if (!this.IsHandleCreated) CreateHandle(); is of great value ... it prevents ThreadExceptions later. Thanks for the answer!
    – tanascius
    May 19, 2017 at 7:23
26

I'm reading all the answers and see hacks and black magic... (no offense, mates)

No hacks needed. You don't even have to set "ShowInTaskbar=false" and other stuff. Just do this:

    //"Form Shown" event handler
    private void Form_Shown(object sender, EventArgs e)
    {
        //to minimize window
        this.WindowState = FormWindowState.Minimized;

        //to hide from taskbar
        this.Hide();
    }

NOTE: I strongly recommend NOT TOUCHING the "ShowInTaskbar" property. For example, if your application registers system-wide hotkeys or other similar stuff (hooks, etc) - setting ShowInTaskBar=false and minimizing your app will prevent Windows from sending some messages to your window... And your hooks/hotkeys/etc will stop working.

5
  • I was doing research on how to do this for my program and this answer was the most simple and effective way to accomplish my goal.
    – Brad
    Apr 19, 2016 at 19:55
  • 1
    @Brad no, you still need to add a NotifyIcon manually. but it will do the trick after you have the icon added. Feb 28, 2018 at 23:27
  • I had everything in place for minimizing to tray (notification area) and it worked when triggered manually. This was the only thing missing to have it automatically on start. No hacking involved. Great answer!
    – heXer
    Feb 13, 2019 at 17:12
  • 1
    Works perfectly- amazing that it took me about 2 hours of googling and testing other methods to get this. Thanks so much. Aug 6, 2019 at 15:53
  • 2
    And FYI- for newer users of VS - in the form properties of the UI Designer, look for the "SHOWN" event - not "FORM SHOWN". Aug 6, 2019 at 15:54
21

In the constructor, remove these two lines:

this.Visible = false;
this.ShowInTaskbar = false;

and add after InitializeComponent();:

this.WindowState = FormWindowState.Minimized;

In designer, set ShowInTaskbar to false & FormWindowState to Normal.

EDIT: If you post the same in Load event, the window does get minimized but still shows minimized on the desktop. I think this is a bug.

9
  • 3
    Or in the form's load event, since the constructor is designer-generated and you're apt to have your change disappear on you now and then. Nov 13, 2009 at 17:38
  • I agree, load event would be a better place
    – Miles
    Nov 13, 2009 at 17:42
  • See my edit. Your change will disappear only if you post the line I have posted before InitializeComponent();. All your designer settings are loaded in InitializeComponent();.
    – Yogesh
    Nov 13, 2009 at 17:47
  • Okay, I moved the initialization code to the load event and made the suggested change. No dice. I still get the minimized title bar on the desktop, only now it doesn't disappear even after manually closing the form. Any other ideas?
    – jluce50
    Nov 13, 2009 at 17:51
  • Re: EDIT: It does seem like bug, but there have got to be people out there doing what I'm trying to do. I'd think a bug like this would be getting a lot more attention...
    – jluce50
    Nov 13, 2009 at 17:57
3

When minimizing an application and you want to hide it from Alt+Tab:

You also need to set the Opacity to stop the titlebar showing near the Start Menu when you set the Border Style to a Tool Window.

On Minimize Event:

this.Visible = false;
this.Opacity = 0;
this.FormBorderStyle = FormBorderStyle.FixedToolWindow;
this.ShowInTaskbar = false;

On Normalize Event:

this.Visible = true;
this.Opacity = 100;
this.FormBorderStyle = FormBorderStyle.FixedSingle; //or whatever it was previously set to
this.ShowInTaskbar = true;
0
0

Move the following code from the Form's constructor to Form_Main_Load(). With the same setup on Notification_Icon when Form_Resize().

// Hide the Form to System Tray
this.WindowState = FormWindowState.Minimized;
-1

This "quick and dirty fix" worked for me:

$form1.FormBorderStyle = "fixedtoolwindow"
$form1.top = -1000000
$form1.Left = -1000000
$form1.Width = 10
$form1.Height = 10
$form1.WindowState = "normal"
$form1.ShowInTaskbar = $False
$form1.Opacity = 0
$form1.Hide()

Hope it helps someone else...

1
  • What language is that?
    – LarsTech
    Jan 31, 2018 at 16:40

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