7

In many confirmation dialogs it is usefull to have such option (quick wayt to disable confirmation). But i can't find how to do that. I don't want to design it myself because i need this dialog to be standard-like and don't wont to redesign with every update of Delphi. Is there simple way to use Delphi standard confirmation dialog with such checkbox ?

UPDATE2. Suggested SynTaskDialog library from Synopse project does great job (all i need and even more), i will use it in my projects. Thanks!

UPDATE. So, thank you guys for ideas. System function MessageBoxCheck is nice solution but seem to be not so stable as it should be. In general i agree that it is good idea to use latest API functions to provide users with best UI experience of modern os and use old-fashioned design for older systems. At moment i stay on simple solution (code is following), but if someone share the code with support of UI for modern OS, it will be nice.

function MsgDlgWithCB(const Msg,Title,CBMsg: string; DlgType: TMsgDlgType;
  Buttons: TMsgDlgButtons; DefaultButton: TMsgDlgBtn;
  var cbDontAskAnymore: TCheckBox): TForm;
var
  i: integer;
  b: TButton;
  y: integer;
begin
  Result := CreateMessageDialog(Msg, DlgType, Buttons, DefaultButton) ;
  Result.Position := poScreenCenter;
  cbDontAskAnymore := TCheckBox.Create(Result);
  cbDontAskAnymore.Caption := CBMsg;
  cbDontAskAnymore.Width := 130;
  y := -1;
  for i := 0 to result.ComponentCount-1 do
    if result.Components[i] is TButton then
    begin
      b := TButton(result.Components[i]);
      b.Left := b.Left + cbDontAskAnymore.Width + 16;
      Result.ClientWidth := Max(Result.ClientWidth, b.Left+b.Width+16);
      y := b.Top+b.Height-cbDontAskAnymore.Height;
    end;
  if y<0 then
    y := Result.ClientHeight - cbDontAskAnymore.height - 16;
  Result.Caption := Title;
  cbDontAskAnymore.Parent := Result;
  cbDontAskAnymore.Top := y;
  cbDontAskAnymore.Left := 8;
end;

function MessageDlgCheckbox(const Msg: string; DlgType: TMsgDlgType;
  Buttons: TMsgDlgButtons; DefaultButton: TMsgDlgBtn;
  var cbDontAskAnymore: Boolean;
  const Title: string ='Confirmation';
  const CBMsg: string = 'Don''t ask anymore'): integer;
var
  f: TForm;
  c: TCheckbox;
begin
  f := MsgDlgWithCB(Msg,Title,CBMsg,DlgType,Buttons,DefaultButton,c);
  try
    result := f.ShowModal;
    cbDontAskAnymore := c.Checked;
  finally
    f.free;
  end;
end;
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  • 3
    The SHMessageBoxCheck function is the most Windows natural way to go.
    – TLama
    Aug 22, 2013 at 11:32
  • SHMessageBoxCheck doesn't seem to be supported beyond XP Aug 22, 2013 at 12:22
  • @David, just testing it right now. Uhm, maybe there's just missing export of it... (hence the way used in RBA's post)
    – TLama
    Aug 22, 2013 at 12:26
  • 2
    @Andrei, the most reliable way is creating your own dialog. Nothing is better. I don't know then, what you're expecting as answer. The answer is, make your own dialog. Delphi doesn't have something built-in for this as far as I know.
    – TLama
    Aug 22, 2013 at 12:42
  • 1
    So you use task dialog on systems that support it and fall back to a custom built dialog otherwise. As per my answer. That's best for the user. Otherwise you penalise users of modern systems just to support people that still use ancient legacy XP from the dark ages. You asked for the platform native dialog, and the answer to that is task dialog. Aug 22, 2013 at 13:01

2 Answers 2

13

You can use our Open Source SynTaskDialog unit.

Windows provides a generic task dialog available since Vista/Seven. But there is none available with previous versions of Windows, i.e. Windows XP or 2K.

This unit (licensed under a MPL/GPL/LGPL tri-license) will use the new TaskDialog API under Vista/Seven, and emulate it with pure Delphi code and standard themed VCL components under XP or 2K. It supports Delphi 6 up to XE4, and is Win32/Win64 Unicode ready.

Here is the result under a Windows Seven 64 bit computer:

enter image description here

And here is the same dialog created from our emulated pure Delphi code:

enter image description here

Since this screenshot was made on a Win 7 machine, the styling is native for that OS. When the emulated version of the dialog runs on XP it displays in a style native to that OS.

You have your "Do not ask for this setting next time" checkbox... and potentially much more!

6
  • Very nice! This looks like a good way to avoid platform limitations. Of course soon we can probably forget about XP compatibility.
    – Warren P
    Aug 22, 2013 at 14:49
  • @Arnaud Wouldn't it be better to use an XP style dialog on XP. Putting Vista styling on XP will look very odd in my view. However, I commend you on making available such a useful piece of software. Aug 22, 2013 at 14:52
  • 4
    @DavidHeffernan This unit uses the XP style on XP. In fact, the above screen shot was taken under Seven, but forcing emulation. It only uses native VCL components (like TBitBtn or such), so it will look just native on every system. Aug 22, 2013 at 15:06
  • Perhaps you could make that clear in the answer to avoid confusion. Aug 22, 2013 at 15:12
  • @DavidHeffernan I modified the text in my answer. Aug 22, 2013 at 15:51
5

The system native functionality that offers such facilities is the task dialog API introduced in Vista. This provides means for you to show much more capable dialogs than the older MessageBox API.

Should you need to support XP then you will have to create your own dialog. For example by deriving from TForm and calling ShowModal. If you do this, make the form capable of building itself dynamically. Don't make one form per message that you show!

In my codebase, I have my own wrapper of the task dialog API. This detects at runtime versions of Windows that do not support task dialog and falls back on a custom built Delphi dialog.

Regarding SHMessageBoxCheck I'd be a little wary of taking a dependency on that. According to its documentation it's not supported beyond XP, and you have to import it by ordinal. I'd personally be worried that it might be dropped from a future version of Windows. That said, MS has a strong track record of doing whatever it takes to keep legacy apps working with new OS releases.

2
  • I'm loving my -1 here. Any explanation? Aug 22, 2013 at 13:09
  • Not really. It's not in a shareable state. Aug 22, 2013 at 14:16

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