apologies in advance as I'm a novice.
I'm trying to work with a windows based game called rFactor with java and the JNA library. I have seen what I want to do by people using c++.
So far I have this (I copied the bulk of it from another stackoverflow post Java search for on-screen text field):
package au.gov.nsw.lpi.bds.jnatest;
import com.sun.jna.Native;
import com.sun.jna.Pointer;
import com.sun.jna.examples.win32.W32API.HWND;
import com.sun.jna.examples.win32.W32API.LPARAM;
import com.sun.jna.win32.StdCallLibrary;
import com.sun.jna.win32.W32APIOptions;
public class IterateChildWindows {
public interface User32 extends StdCallLibrary {
User32 INSTANCE = (User32) Native.loadLibrary("user32", User32.class, W32APIOptions.DEFAULT_OPTIONS);
int SendMessage(HWND hWnd, int msg, int wParam, byte[] lParam);
boolean FindWindowEx(HWND parent, HWND child, String className, String window);
boolean EnumWindows(WNDENUMPROC lpEnumFunc, Pointer arg);
boolean EnumChildWindows(HWND parent, WNDENUMPROC callback, LPARAM info);
interface WNDENUMPROC extends StdCallCallback {
boolean callback(HWND name, Pointer arg);
}
int GetWindowTextA(HWND hWnd, byte[] lpString, int nMaxCount);
int GetClassNameA(HWND in, byte[] lpString, int size);
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
User32.INSTANCE.EnumWindows(new User32.WNDENUMPROC() {
public boolean callback(HWND hWnd, Pointer userData) {
byte[] textBuffer = new byte[512];
User32.INSTANCE.GetWindowTextA(hWnd, textBuffer, 512);
String wText = Native.toString(textBuffer);
if (wText.contains("ISI Dedicated Server")) {
if (User32.INSTANCE.FindWindowEx(hWnd, null, "Static", "Game Name:")) {
System.out.println(new String(textBuffer).trim() + " - " + hWnd);
User32.INSTANCE.EnumChildWindows(hWnd, new User32.WNDENUMPROC() {
int count = 1;
public boolean callback(HWND hWnd, Pointer userData) {
byte[] textBuffer = new byte[512];
User32.INSTANCE.GetClassNameA(hWnd, textBuffer, 512);
if ((new String(textBuffer).trim()).contains("Edit")) {
System.out.println(new String(textBuffer).trim());
System.out.println(hWnd);
// User32.INSTANCE.SendMessage(hWnd,
// WM_SETTEXT, msg.length(), (LPARAM) msg);
}
if ((new String(textBuffer).trim()).contains("Button")) {
if (count == 8) {
System.out.println(new String(textBuffer).trim() + " " + count);
System.out.println(hWnd);
}
count++;
}
return true;
}
}, null);
}
}
return true;
}
}, null);
}
}
This produces
ISI Dedicated Server - native@0x207e0 (com.sun.jna.examples.win32.W32API$HWND@207e0)
Edit
native@0x207ac (com.sun.jna.examples.win32.W32API$HWND@207ac)
Button 8
native@0x207a8 (com.sun.jna.examples.win32.W32API$HWND@207a8)
I think I'm on the right track as I've isolated the right "EDIT" and "BUTTON" that I need. I believe I now need to put text into the edit field and then use the button using
int SendMessage(HWND hWnd, int msg, int wParam, byte[] lParam);
This is an example from c++
SendMessage(chatHwnd, WM_SETTEXT, msgSB.Length, msgSB)
I've tried but had no luck getting it to work. Any help would be appreciated.
Edit, I've tried this (though I'm pretty much fumbling in the dark)
int SendMessage(HWND hWnd, int msg, int wParam, byte[] lParam);
and this
public boolean callback(HWND hWnd, Pointer userData) {
byte[] textBuffer = new byte[512];
User32.INSTANCE.GetClassNameA(hWnd, textBuffer, 512);
if ((new String(textBuffer).trim()).contains("Edit")) {
User32.INSTANCE.SendMessage(hWnd,0xC, msg.length,
Native.toByteArray("MessageFromNick"));
}
if ((new String(textBuffer).trim()).contains("Button")) {
if (count == 8) {
User32.INSTANCE.SendMessage(hWnd, 0x0201, 0, 0);
}
count++;
}
return true;
}
Native.toByteArray(String)
to obtain a properly null-terminated array of bytes (or array ofchar
if you're using the unicode version ofSendMessage
).