21

What is the best way to make a Delphi application (Delphi 2007 for Win32) go completely full screen, removing the application border and covering the Windows Taskbar?

I am looking for something similar to what Internet Explorer (IE) does when you hit F11.

I wish this to be a run time option for the user not a design time decision by my good self.

As mentioned in the accepted answer

BorderStyle := bsNone; 

was part of the way to do it. Strangely I kept getting an E2010 Incompatible types: 'TFormBorderStyle' and 'TBackGroundSymbol' error when using that line (another type had bsNone defined).

To overcome this I had to use:

BorderStyle := Forms.bsNone;

10 Answers 10

31

Well, this has always worked for me. Seems a bit simpler...

procedure TForm52.Button1Click(Sender: TObject);
begin
  BorderStyle := bsNone;
  WindowState := wsMaximized;
end;
4
  • 1
    +1 Sometimes people try too hard: blogs.msdn.com/b/oldnewthing/archive/2005/05/05/414910.aspx
    – Alex
    Jul 1, 2010 at 14:25
  • Wow, i would not have believed it if i hadn't tested it myself. i know that setting WindowsState := wsMaximized will not cover the taskbar (it will be just a maximized window). So it was not unreasonable to assume that removing the border would lead to a maximized window with no border. But there's some undocumented trick somewhere (VCL or Windows) that removing the border of a maximized window will cause it to resize to fill the entire screen. (As opposed to Raymond's article where you explicitly size the form to the screen dimensions)
    – Ian Boyd
    Apr 2, 2012 at 13:56
  • Windows 7 here (64bit) + Delphi XE 7: that doesn't work. The Windows taskbar still shows. Tested on Windows 8.1: same as W7 + the action bar that you can pull from the right is still available.
    – Ninj
    Nov 5, 2015 at 8:56
  • Edit: On Windows 7 that works (I forgot to remove the Align := alClient on the form). But on Windows 8.1 the action bar that you can pull from the right is still available. Any solution?
    – Ninj
    Nov 5, 2015 at 10:17
10

A Google search turned up the following, additional methods:

(though I think I'd try Roddy's method first)

Manually fill the screen (from: About Delphi)

procedure TSomeForm.FormShow(Sender: TObject) ;
var
   r : TRect;
begin
   Borderstyle := bsNone;
   SystemParametersInfo
      (SPI_GETWORKAREA, 0, @r,0) ;
   SetBounds
     (r.Left, r.Top, r.Right-r.Left, r.Bottom-r.Top) ;
end;

Variation on a theme by Roddy

FormStyle := fsStayOnTop;
BorderStyle := bsNone;
Left := 0;
Top := 0;
Width := Screen.Width;
Height := Screen.Height;

The WinAPI way (by Peter Below from TeamB)

private  // in form declaration
    Procedure WMGetMinMaxInfo(Var msg: TWMGetMinMaxInfo);
      message WM_GETMINMAXINFO;

Procedure TForm1.WMGetMinMaxInfo(Var msg: TWMGetMinMaxInfo);
  Begin
    inherited;
    With msg.MinMaxInfo^.ptMaxTrackSize Do Begin
      X := GetDeviceCaps( Canvas.handle, HORZRES ) + (Width - ClientWidth);
      Y := GetDeviceCaps( Canvas.handle, VERTRES ) + (Height - ClientHeight
);
    End;
  End;

procedure TForm1.Button2Click(Sender: TObject);
Const
  Rect: TRect = (Left:0; Top:0; Right:0; Bottom:0);
  FullScreen: Boolean = False;
begin
  FullScreen := not FullScreen;  
  If FullScreen Then Begin
    Rect := BoundsRect;
    SetBounds(
      Left - ClientOrigin.X,
      Top - ClientOrigin.Y,
      GetDeviceCaps( Canvas.handle, HORZRES ) + (Width - ClientWidth),
      GetDeviceCaps( Canvas.handle, VERTRES ) + (Height - ClientHeight ));
  //  Label2.caption := IntToStr(GetDeviceCaps( Canvas.handle, VERTRES ));
  End
  Else
    BoundsRect := Rect;
end; 
3

Maximize the form and hide the title bar. The maximize line is done from memory, but I'm pretty sure WindowState is the property you want.

There's also this article, but that seems too complicated to me.

procedure TForm1.FormCreate(Sender: TObject) ;
begin
   //maximize the window
   WindowState := wsMaximized;
   //hide the title bar
   SetWindowLong(Handle,GWL_STYLE,GetWindowLong(Handle,GWL_STYLE) and not WS_CAPTION);
   ClientHeight := Height;
end;

Edit: Here's a complete example, with "full screen" and "restore" options. I've broken out the different parts into little procedures for maximum clarity, so this could be greatly compressed into just a few lines.

unit Unit1;

interface

uses
  Windows, Messages, SysUtils, Variants, Classes, Graphics, Controls, Forms,
  Dialogs, StdCtrls;

type
  TForm1 = class(TForm)
    btnGoFullScreen: TButton;
    btnNotFullScreen: TButton;
    btnShowTitleBar: TButton;
    btnHideTitleBar: TButton;
    btnQuit: TButton;
    procedure btnGoFullScreenClick(Sender: TObject);
    procedure btnShowTitleBarClick(Sender: TObject);
    procedure btnHideTitleBarClick(Sender: TObject);
    procedure btnNotFullScreenClick(Sender: TObject);
    procedure btnQuitClick(Sender: TObject);
  private
    SavedLeft : integer;
    SavedTop : integer;
    SavedWidth : integer;
    SavedHeight : integer;
    SavedWindowState : TWindowState;
    procedure FullScreen;
    procedure NotFullScreen;
    procedure SavePosition;
    procedure HideTitleBar;
    procedure ShowTitleBar;
    procedure RestorePosition;
    procedure MaximizeWindow;
  public
    { Public declarations }
  end;

var
  Form1: TForm1;

implementation

{$R *.dfm}

procedure TForm1.btnQuitClick(Sender: TObject);
begin
  Application.Terminate;
end;

procedure TForm1.btnGoFullScreenClick(Sender: TObject);
begin
  FullScreen;
end;

procedure TForm1.btnNotFullScreenClick(Sender: TObject);
begin
  NotFullScreen;
end;

procedure TForm1.btnShowTitleBarClick(Sender: TObject);
begin
  ShowTitleBar;
end;

procedure TForm1.btnHideTitleBarClick(Sender: TObject);
begin
  HideTitleBar;
end;

procedure TForm1.FullScreen;
begin
  SavePosition;
  HideTitleBar;
  MaximizeWindow;
end;

procedure TForm1.HideTitleBar;
begin
  SetWindowLong(Handle,GWL_STYLE,GetWindowLong(Handle,GWL_STYLE) and not WS_CAPTION);
  ClientHeight := Height;
end;

procedure TForm1.MaximizeWindow;
begin
  WindowState := wsMaximized;
end;

procedure TForm1.NotFullScreen;
begin
  RestorePosition;
  ShowTitleBar;
end;

procedure TForm1.RestorePosition;
begin
  //this proc uses what we saved in "SavePosition"
  WindowState := SavedWindowState;
  Top := SavedTop;
  Left := SavedLeft;
  Width := SavedWidth;
  Height := SavedHeight;
end;

procedure TForm1.SavePosition;
begin
  SavedLeft := Left;
  SavedHeight := Height;
  SavedTop := Top;
  SavedWidth := Width;
  SavedWindowState := WindowState;
end;

procedure TForm1.ShowTitleBar;
begin
  SetWindowLong(Handle,gwl_Style,GetWindowLong(Handle,gwl_Style) or ws_Caption or ws_border);
  Height := Height + GetSystemMetrics(SM_CYCAPTION);
  Refresh;
end;

end.
2

Put to the form onShow event such code:

  WindowState:=wsMaximized;

And to the OnCanResize this:

  if (newwidth<width) and (newheight<height) then
    Resize:=false;
1

How to constrain a sub-form within the Mainform like it was an MDI app., but without the headaches! (Note: The replies on this page helped me get this working, so that's why I posted my solution here)

private
{ Private declarations }
  StickyAt: Word;
  procedure WMWINDOWPOSCHANGING(Var Msg: TWMWINDOWPOSCHANGING); Message M_WINDOWPOSCHANGING;
  Procedure WMGetMinMaxInfo(Var msg: TWMGetMinMaxInfo); message WM_GETMINMAXINFO;

later...

    procedure TForm2.WMWINDOWPOSCHANGING(var Msg: TWMWINDOWPOSCHANGING);
    var
      A, B: Integer;
      iFrameSize: Integer;
      iCaptionHeight: Integer;
      iMenuHeight: Integer;
    begin

      iFrameSize := GetSystemMetrics(SM_CYFIXEDFRAME);
      iCaptionHeight := GetSystemMetrics(SM_CYCAPTION);
      iMenuHeight := GetSystemMetrics(SM_CYMENU);

      // inside the Mainform client area
      A := Application.MainForm.Left + iFrameSize;
      B := Application.MainForm.Top + iFrameSize + iCaptionHeight + iMenuHeight;

      with Msg.WindowPos^ do
      begin

        if x <= A + StickyAt then
          x := A;

        if x + cx >= A + Application.MainForm.ClientWidth - StickyAt then
          x := (A + Application.MainForm.ClientWidth) - cx + 1;

       if y <= B + StickyAt then
         y := B;

       if y + cy >= B + Application.MainForm.ClientHeight - StickyAt then
         y := (B + Application.MainForm.ClientHeight) - cy + 1;

      end;
end;

and yet more...

Procedure TForm2.WMGetMinMaxInfo(Var msg: TWMGetMinMaxInfo);
var
  iFrameSize: Integer;
  iCaptionHeight: Integer;
  iMenuHeight: Integer;
Begin
  inherited;
  iFrameSize := GetSystemMetrics(SM_CYFIXEDFRAME);
  iCaptionHeight := GetSystemMetrics(SM_CYCAPTION);
  iMenuHeight := GetSystemMetrics(SM_CYMENU);
  With msg.MinMaxInfo^.ptMaxPosition Do
  begin
    // position of top when maximised
    X := Application.MainForm.Left + iFrameSize + 1;
    Y := Application.MainForm.Top + iFrameSize + iCaptionHeight + iMenuHeight + 1;
  end;
  With msg.MinMaxInfo^.ptMaxSize Do
  Begin
     // width and height when maximized
     X := Application.MainForm.ClientWidth;
     Y := Application.MainForm.ClientHeight;
  End;
  With msg.MinMaxInfo^.ptMaxTrackSize Do
  Begin
     // maximum size when maximised
     X := Application.MainForm.ClientWidth;
     Y := Application.MainForm.ClientHeight;
  End;
  // to do: minimum size (maybe)
End;
1

In my case, the only working solution is:

procedure TFormHelper.FullScreenMode;
begin
  BorderStyle := bsNone;
  ShowWindowAsync(Handle, SW_MAXIMIZE);
end;
0

You need to make sure Form position is poDefaultPosOnly.

Form1.Position := poDefaultPosOnly;
Form1.FormStyle := fsStayOnTop;
Form1.BorderStyle := bsNone;
Form1.Left := 0;
Form1.Top := 0;
Form1.Width := Screen.Width;
Form1.Height := Screen.Height;

Tested and works on Win7 x64.

1
  • What if you have dual monitor?
    – IceCold
    May 30, 2014 at 9:23
0

Try:

Align = alClient    
FormStyle = fsStayOnTop

This always align to the primary monitor;

1
  • What you wrote is not even close to code, missing double-dots, missing line separators, caused me a loss of 2 additional minutes when I needed a minute of acceleration. Please, either write complete useful code, or do not write at all. {code} Align := alClient; FormStyle := fsStayOnTop; {code} Nov 12, 2016 at 2:45
0

Hm. Looking at the responses I seem to remember dealing with this about 8 years ago when I coded a game. To make debugging easier, I used the device-context of a normal, Delphi form as the source for a fullscreen display.

The point being, that DirectX is capable of running any device context fullscreen - including the one allocated by your form.

So to give an app "true" fullscreen capabilities, track down a DirectX library for Delphi and it will probably contain what you need out of the box.

-1

VCL

Here are two button click events to go into FullScreen and to exit FullScreen:

procedure TForm1.GoFullScreen(Sender: TObject);
begin
  BorderStyle := bsNone;
  WindowState := wsMaximized;
end;

procedure TForm1.ExitFullScreen(Sender: TObject);
begin
  BorderStyle := bsSizable;
  WindowState := wsNormal;
end;

FMX

And for those finding themselves here looking to do the same in FireMonkey (FMX). The VCL method of changing BorderStyle and WindowState will kind of work in FMX, but the correct way is to use the FullScreen property on the form in FMX:

procedure TForm1.GoFullScreen(Sender: TObject);
begin
  FullScreen := True;
end;

procedure TForm1.ExitFullScreen(Sender: TObject);
begin
  FullScreen := False;
end;

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