3

How can I change the window class of a win32 window after creation? I am asking out of curiosity, because I've found with Spy++ that one of these fancy desktop-customization tools from Stardock does exactly that.

Disclaimer (sadly neccessary nowadays): I've searched the documentation and couldn't find anything. I know that this is probably not intended to be done, might cause a lot of wierd side-effects, and should not be done in a production application. Still, I'd like to know how they pulled it off.

Edit: The background story, might be interesting.

I was playing around with Stardock's ModernMix, which allows you to use Metro / Modern / Windows Store apps on the Desktop, in windowed mode, and I wanted to figure out how they do it. I quickly found out that Modern apps just run in regular, fullscreen Win32 windows! You can actually change the window styles to un-maximized it and give it a titlebar etc.. However, at least one thing doesn't work: You cannot use aero snap on the window, and the hot edge on the top of the screen still treats the window as a Modern app. This problem does not exist in ModernMix, so I was looking for the difference.

I continuously displayed various debugging information in my app, including the HWND, window styles, and also examined the Window with Spy++. It turns out that when ModernMix unmaximizes a window, it's class "changes" from Windows.UI.Core.CoreWindow to Windows.UI.Core.CoreFramedWindow. The HWND displayed in my window didn't change however! So I wrongly concluded ModernMix gets rid of the special behavior of the window by changing the class... But it turns out, ModernMix just creates another toplevel, and somehow redirects the original window's contents to the new toplevel (at least that's what it looks like).

(I'm still leaving the question here, even if only as a reference that it can't be done.)

3
  • There's certainly no officially supported way of doing this. You can subclass a window and change its WndProc but the class itself won't change. Feb 18, 2014 at 23:11
  • I seriously doubt that Spy++ is changing anything. What exactly do you think it is changing? Be specific. Feb 19, 2014 at 1:34
  • @RemyLebeau: No, I thought the tool (ModernMix) was changing the window class. I found it out with Spy++. It turns out that ModernMix was creating an additional window and probably mirroring the original window's contents. When I displayed the HWND inside of the window, it didn't change, but the class in Spy++ changed.
    – jdm
    Feb 19, 2014 at 7:43

1 Answer 1

5

There is no way to change the class of an existing window. The only option is to destroy the original window and create a new window using a different class.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.