6

Does anyone have an idea about how to get rid of flickering? I researched on SO, the web, and tried out many different things like putting TickerControl into a double buffered Panel a la Double Buffering when not drawing in OnPaint(): why doesn't it work? etc. besides many other things. It still flickers, not on every repaint, but a couple times per second.

Also, even after removing the "g.Clear(BackColor)" in OnPaint, something must still be clearing the background, as the text continues to scroll readably.

Here the relevant parts of my TickerControl class:

class TickerControl : Control
{
    private static readonly StringFormat stringFormat = new StringFormat(StringFormatFlags.NoWrap);

    private const int padding = 40;
    private const int scrollSleep = 10;
    private const int scrollAdvancePixels = 1;

    private float textWidth;
    private float currentX;

    private static readonly Timer scrollTimer = new Timer();

    public TickerControl()
    {
        this.SetStyle(ControlStyles.UserPaint |
                      ControlStyles.AllPaintingInWmPaint |
                      ControlStyles.OptimizedDoubleBuffer
                      , true);
        scrollTimer.Tick += AdvanceText;
        scrollTimer.Interval = scrollSleep;
        scrollTimer.Enabled = true;
    }

    private void AdvanceText(object sender, EventArgs e)
    {
        if (IsDisposed)
            return;

        currentX -= scrollAdvancePixels;
        if (currentX <= -textWidth)
            currentX = 0;
        Invalidate();
    }

    protected override void OnPaintBackground(PaintEventArgs pevent)
    {
    }

    protected override void OnPaint(PaintEventArgs e)
    {
        Graphics g = e.Graphics;

        g.Clear(BackColor);

        using (SolidBrush brush = new SolidBrush(ForeColor))
        {
            g.DrawString(Text, Font, brush, currentX, 0, stringFormat);
            g.DrawString(Text, Font, brush, currentX + textWidth, 0, stringFormat);
        }
    }

Any ideas?

Update:

As sallushan suggested manual double buffering, let me add that I had tried that before, using the code below. But on screen it looks exactly like the above, so the problem does not seem to lie inside my OnPaint method. I guess it must be somewhere in the setup of my Control.

    private Bitmap backBuffer;

    protected override void OnPaint(PaintEventArgs e)
    {
        if (backBuffer == null)
            backBuffer = new Bitmap(this.ClientSize.Width, this.ClientSize.Height);

        Graphics g = Graphics.FromImage(backBuffer);

        g.Clear(BackColor);

        using (SolidBrush brush = new SolidBrush(ForeColor))
        {
            g.DrawString(Text, Font, brush, currentX, 0, stringFormat);
            g.DrawString(Text, Font, brush, currentX + textWidth, 0, stringFormat);
        }

        g.Dispose();

        e.Graphics.DrawImageUnscaled(backBuffer, 0, 0);
    }

    protected override void OnPaintBackground(PaintEventArgs pevent)
    {
        // Don't call base!
    }

    protected override void OnSizeChanged(EventArgs e)
    {
        if (backBuffer != null)
        {
            backBuffer.Dispose();
            backBuffer = null;
        }
        base.OnSizeChanged(e);
    }
4
  • 4
    This effect is not called flicker, it is called tearing. You see part of the old bitmap and part of the new bitmap. Which becomes very noticeable on moving objects, they appear jittery. Not fixable in Winforms, google "vertical blanking interval". Aug 19, 2011 at 11:38
  • Your sample code doesn't flicker on my Win7-64. BTW, you don't assign textWidth a value in your code.
    – LarsTech
    Aug 19, 2011 at 11:41
  • @Hans: Thanks for the info. When I first read your comment, I thought you were kidding me. Especially as I've better tickers 10 years ago in a freaking Java 1.0 applet, when there still were CRTs around that did actually have a "vertical blanking interval". Looks like I'm out of luck here - but will try to look at the DirectX option you mentioned in another answer here on SO. P.S. Why don't you make your comment an answer? I'd accept it. Aug 19, 2011 at 11:58
  • @Lars: Yep, I did not paste that textWidth bit. I'm on Win7-64, too. And here, it does, well, if not flicker, at least it does 'tear'. Aug 19, 2011 at 12:04

6 Answers 6

6

Set this code in your form. It will remove the flicker

 protected override CreateParams CreateParams
        {
            get
            {
                CreateParams cp = base.CreateParams;
                cp.ExStyle |= 0x02000000;

                return cp;
            }
        }

Hope it helps

7
  • 1
    It did not remove the flicker. I tried that snippet on the Form and on the Panel that contains the TickerControl, to no avail. Btw., it would be nice if you added the meaning of 0x02000000 so that it can be understood or googled more easily. It is the constant WS_EX_COMPOSITED. Aug 19, 2011 at 9:56
  • 3
    Don't bicker about the ticker flicker! Aug 19, 2011 at 11:00
  • 9
    Russ, although your comment did evoke a little snicker, a no-flicker ticker would be even slicker. Aug 19, 2011 at 11:11
  • While using this ExStyle, I got 100% cpu-load (winXP .net4). Is there a solution for this?
    – basti
    Jun 5, 2012 at 10:15
  • On windows 7 (using Aero), this madfe my flickering problem even worse.
    – Sam-Elie
    Feb 19, 2013 at 10:10
1

Create a constant bitmap as a frame. And make your changes on that bitmap then render that bitmap on the control. This should remove the flickering.

class MyControl : System.Windows.Forms.Control
{
    Bitmap bmp;
    Graphics g;
    int x = 100;

    public MyControl()
    {
        this.SetStyle(System.Windows.Forms.ControlStyles.AllPaintingInWmPaint | System.Windows.Forms.ControlStyles.UserPaint | System.Windows.Forms.ControlStyles.OptimizedDoubleBuffer , true);

        bmp = new Bitmap(100, 100);
        g = Graphics.FromImage(bmp);
    }        

    protected override void OnPaint(System.Windows.Forms.PaintEventArgs e)
    {
        this.g.FillRectangle(Brushes.White, new Rectangle(0, 0, 100, 100));
        this.g.DrawString("Hello", this.Font, Brushes.Black, (float)x, 10);

        e.Graphics.DrawImage(bmp, new Point(0, 0));

        x--;
    }
}
2
  • sallushan, I tried manual double buffering, but it looks just the same as WinForms' builtin OptimizedDoubleBuffering (and of course I tried the non-optimized DoubleBuffering as well, to no avail). Aug 19, 2011 at 10:56
  • yes I realized it later. What I remember from QBasic experience we used to put a hardware "Wait" after frame rendering to resolve Vertical blanking Interval. But don't know how to do it here.
    – sallushan
    Aug 20, 2011 at 15:44
0

Try using the Invalidate(rectangle) or Invalidate(Region) methods to limit the amount of repainting to that which actually needs to be done. You are currently redrawing the complete control during every OnPaint Event.

3
  • In a ticker, basically everything moves all the time. How could I restrict the repainting to a smaller area? With double buffering, there should not be any need for this. Aug 19, 2011 at 7:15
  • @Eugene - Thats not true, you have a definite area which either a) Currently contains the text or b) Used to contain the text which could be invalidated. Simply calculate one rectange which contains the intersection of these areas and invalidate that!
    – Jamiec
    Aug 19, 2011 at 11:21
  • Jamiec, a ticker scrolls, because it is too small to show all text at the same time. In other words, a real ticker will always be filled from left to right, and every change will basically affect the whole drawing area. Of course there are always many very small rectangles where nothing changes. But it would be a waste trying to figure those out and it wouldn't fix the flicker issue anyway. Aug 19, 2011 at 11:30
0

Well, apart from the triple buffering idea - which frankly I never used in my custom controls, and I had quite complex ones -, I would say that invalidating the control every 10ms has something to do with it. That is 100 times a second. Movies with 25fps are comfortable for the human eye in terms of fluidity of motion, yet you repaint your control 4 times more than that.

Try a higher value: say 40.

Also, when you repaint the control, you can repaint just a region of it, that parts that changed: the union of the two regions that form the old text location and new text location. You dont need to repaint any surrounding area that is still in place (be it background or whatnot).

DrawString() is pretty slow compared to TextRenderer's DrawText - around 6 times, you might want to use that. You will loose some features (uses GDI, instead of GDI+) but maybe it suits your scenario.

Oh, I would also micro-optimize and pull out that SolidBrush brush you re-create in every OnPaint() outside as a class member, update it only when ForeColor changes.

5
  • 1
    Well, regardless of what you pass in as the interval, the resolution of a System.Windows.Forms.Timer is 55ms, so it will never run that fast. At best you will get < 20fps. Aug 19, 2011 at 16:07
  • That's nice info, never bumped into that.
    – Vladimir
    Aug 19, 2011 at 16:23
  • Yeah, and even if it weren't, the normal system timer resolution is typically about 15ms. To get higher precision than that you would need to use the CPU's high performance counter. Aug 19, 2011 at 17:29
  • @Ed You would be right, if MS' implementation adhered to their documentation. I measured, it doesn't. In a real client app (with heavy load during startup) I Stopwatch'd ~2000 Ticks of Forms.Timer. Here the observed intervals. min 1ms, max 1088ms, mean 16ms, standard deviation 26ms. This is .net 3.5 on Win 7 64bit. Sep 2, 2011 at 3:26
  • I forgot to mention: The Timer's interval in the previous comment was set to 1ms. Sep 2, 2011 at 8:58
0

As it looks like you're drawing 2 of the string next to each other:

g.DrawString(Text, Font, brush, currentX, 0, stringFormat);
g.DrawString(Text, Font, brush, currentX + textWidth, 0, stringFormat);

It should simply be a case of just Invalidate'ing only that part of the control which has changed. The simplest method would be to cache/calculate the height of the string and do this:

 Invalidate(new Rectangle((int)currentX, 0, (int)textWidth*2, (int)textHeight));

On my machine, this is noticably smoother than invalidating the whole control.

0

Turning Hans Passant's comment into an answer so that I can accept it:

This effect is not called flicker, it is called tearing. You see part of the old bitmap and part of the new bitmap. Which becomes very noticeable on moving objects, they appear jittery. Not fixable in Winforms, google "vertical blanking interval". – Hans Passant

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