54

I wanted to make my windows form transparent so removed the borders, controls and everything leaving only the forms box, then I tried to the BackColor and TransparencyKey to transparent but it didnt work out as BackColor would not accept transparent color. After searching around I found this at msdn:

SetStyle(ControlStyles.UserPaint, true);
SetStyle(ControlStyles.OptimizedDoubleBuffer, true);
SetStyle(ControlStyles.SupportsTransparentBackColor, true);
this.BackColor = Color.Transparent;
this.TransparencyKey = BackColor;

Unhappyly it did not work either. I still get the grey or any other selected color background.

All I wanted to do is to have the windows form transparent so I could use a background image that would act as if it was my windows form.

I searched around here and saw many topics in regards opacity which is not what I am looking for and also saw some in regards this method I was trying but have not found an answer yet.

Hope anyone can light my path.

UPDATE:

image removed as problem is solved

7
  • Can you please clarify a little what you want to do? I didn't understand what you are trying to achieve with the background image.
    – Ran
    Dec 8, 2010 at 13:04
  • I want to make my own custom application window in a simple way so instead of using the winforms default window, I am trying to make it transparent to use my background image instead.
    – Prix
    Dec 8, 2010 at 13:06
  • Do you mean that the background image will be drawn on some other window that is placed behind your window? I don't understand why you can't just override OnPaint and draw the background image there...
    – Ran
    Dec 8, 2010 at 13:19
  • @Ran I have updated with an example, the green part is remaints of the windows form which i want to make completely transparent.
    – Prix
    Dec 8, 2010 at 13:26
  • I see. So 2 more questions...:) Did you set the image file as the Form's BackgroundImage property? What is the image's format?
    – Ran
    Dec 8, 2010 at 13:41

8 Answers 8

92

The manner I have used before is to use a wild color (a color no one in their right mind would use) for the BackColor and then set the transparency key to that.

this.BackColor = Color.LimeGreen;
this.TransparencyKey = Color.LimeGreen;
17
  • 2
    That does not work, when I do that I simple get a Lime background. I have seem this answer in other topics and tried but thanks.
    – Prix
    Dec 8, 2010 at 13:07
  • @Prix - the only way I've seen this done to use an image as a transparent background for a form is to use Graphics.Clip msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/…. This gets very complex. Dec 8, 2010 at 13:11
  • 1
    it is not a image as transparent background, it is a image ON the transparent windows form. the only problem i have is the background of the windows form won't go transparent the image is 100% as it should be.
    – Prix
    Dec 8, 2010 at 13:13
  • @Prix - the solution I posted provides a transparent background for a Windows form in Framework 4.0. (I just tested it as well). However, if you inject an image into the background that needs transparency, you'll have to use a transparent bitmap to accomplish it. If you use the solution above, you could put your image into a label or panel control and just make sure it is "sent to the back". Your image will still need to be a transparent bitmap though. Just throwing a png in there won't do it. Dec 8, 2010 at 13:16
  • It is a png with transparency and if i set the background color to anything i can perfectly see thru the transparent parts of the image i just can't set the forms transparent. I will try that again with 4.0, was using 3.5 not sure if it will make any difference.
    – Prix
    Dec 8, 2010 at 13:19
32

A simple solution to get a transparent background in a windows form is to overwrite the OnPaintBackground method like this:

protected override void OnPaintBackground(PaintEventArgs e)
{
    //empty implementation
}

(Notice that the base.OnpaintBackground(e) is removed from the function)

2
  • I noticed that the accepted answer flashed the default background color sometimes before the transparency kicked in. This seems to work reliably for my purposes. Thanks!
    – Fls'Zen
    Feb 1, 2013 at 15:26
  • 4
    This answer is better because it doesn't cause weird things like this: i.imgur.com/lYFunRT.png (notice the weird "lime green" shadow) Aug 16, 2017 at 19:11
10

Here was my solution:

In the constructors add these two lines:

this.BackColor = Color.LimeGreen;
this.TransparencyKey = Color.LimeGreen;

In your form, add this method:

protected override void OnPaintBackground(PaintEventArgs e)
{
    e.Graphics.FillRectangle(Brushes.LimeGreen, e.ClipRectangle);
}

Be warned, not only is this form fully transparent inside the frame, but you can also click through it. However, it might be cool to draw an image onto it and make the form able to be dragged everywhere to create a custom shaped form.

1
  • 1
    Hi, AyrA! I was wondering... Could I make this not-click-through? I am tryna make a screenshot program...
    – Momoro
    Oct 30, 2019 at 22:23
9

I've tried the solutions above (and also) many other solutions from other posts.

In my case, I did it with the following setup:

public partial class WaitingDialog : Form
{
    public WaitingDialog()
    {
        InitializeComponent();

        SetStyle(ControlStyles.SupportsTransparentBackColor, true);
        this.BackColor = Color.Transparent;

        // Other stuff
    }

    protected override void OnPaintBackground(PaintEventArgs e) { /* Ignore */ }
}

As you can see, this is a mix of previously given answers.

1
  • 1
    Using this I had problems with the background becoming completely white if I updated the text of a label on the form i.e. it loses it's transparency.
    – kjbartel
    Jul 13, 2015 at 8:30
6

My solution was extremely close to Joel's (Not Etherton, just plain Joel):

public partial class WaitingDialog : Form
{
    public WaitingDialog()
    {
        InitializeComponent();

        SetStyle(ControlStyles.SupportsTransparentBackColor, true);
        this.BackColor = Color.Transparent;
        this.TransparencyKey = Color.Transparent; // I had to add this to get it to work.

        // Other stuff
    }

    protected override void OnPaintBackground(PaintEventArgs e) { /* Ignore */ }
}
1
  • This did not work for me. Other controls which I had on the form became semi-transparent also rather than just the background.
    – kjbartel
    Jul 13, 2015 at 8:28
3

I had drawn a splash screen (32bpp BGRA) with "transparent" background color in VS2013 and put a pictureBox in a form for display. For me a combination of above answers worked:

public Form1()
{
    InitializeComponent();

    SetStyle(ControlStyles.SupportsTransparentBackColor, true);
    this.BackColor = this.pictureBox1.BackColor;
    this.TransparencyKey = this.pictureBox1.BackColor;
}

So make sure you use the same BackColor everywhere and set that color as the TransparencyKey.

2

What works for me is using a specific color instead of the real ability of .png to represent transparency.

So, what you can do is take your background image, and paint the transparent area with a specific color (Magenta always seemed appropriate to me...).

Set the image as the Form's BackgrounImage property, and set the color as the Form's TransparencyKey. No need for changes in the Control's style, and no need for BackColor.

I've tryed it right now and it worked for me...

2

I tried almost all of this. but still couldn't work. Finally I found it was because of 24bitmap problems. If you tried some bitmap which less than 24bit. Most of those above methods should work.

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