In Delphi XE can I allow my form to accept file 'drag and drop' but without having to handle bare windows messages?
5 Answers
You don't need to handle messages to implement this. You just need to implement IDropTarget
and call RegisterDragDrop
/RevokeDragDrop
. It's really very very simple. You can actually implement IDropTarget
in your form code but I prefer to do it in a helper class that looks like this:
uses
Winapi.Windows,
Winapi.ActiveX,
Winapi.ShellAPI,
System.StrUtils,
Vcl.Forms;
type
IDragDrop = interface
function DropAllowed(const FileNames: array of string): Boolean;
procedure Drop(const FileNames: array of string);
end;
TDropTarget = class(TObject, IInterface, IDropTarget)
private
// IInterface
function QueryInterface(const IID: TGUID; out Obj): HResult; stdcall;
function _AddRef: Integer; stdcall;
function _Release: Integer; stdcall;
private
// IDropTarget
FHandle: HWND;
FDragDrop: IDragDrop;
FDropAllowed: Boolean;
procedure GetFileNames(const dataObj: IDataObject; var FileNames: TArray<string>);
procedure SetEffect(var dwEffect: Integer);
function DragEnter(const dataObj: IDataObject; grfKeyState: Integer; pt: TPoint; var dwEffect: Integer): HResult; stdcall;
function DragOver(grfKeyState: Longint; pt: TPoint; var dwEffect: Longint): HResult; stdcall;
function DragLeave: HResult; stdcall;
function Drop(const dataObj: IDataObject; grfKeyState: Longint; pt: TPoint; var dwEffect: Longint): HResult; stdcall;
public
constructor Create(AHandle: HWND; const ADragDrop: IDragDrop);
destructor Destroy; override;
end;
{ TDropTarget }
constructor TDropTarget.Create(AHandle: HWND; const ADragDrop: IDragDrop);
begin
inherited Create;
FHandle := AHandle;
FDragDrop := ADragDrop;
RegisterDragDrop(FHandle, Self)
end;
destructor TDropTarget.Destroy;
begin
RevokeDragDrop(FHandle);
inherited;
end;
function TDropTarget.QueryInterface(const IID: TGUID; out Obj): HResult;
begin
if GetInterface(IID, Obj) then begin
Result := S_OK;
end else begin
Result := E_NOINTERFACE;
end;
end;
function TDropTarget._AddRef: Integer;
begin
Result := -1;
end;
function TDropTarget._Release: Integer;
begin
Result := -1;
end;
procedure TDropTarget.GetFileNames(const dataObj: IDataObject; var FileNames: TArray<string>);
var
i: Integer;
formatetcIn: TFormatEtc;
medium: TStgMedium;
dropHandle: HDROP;
begin
FileNames := nil;
formatetcIn.cfFormat := CF_HDROP;
formatetcIn.ptd := nil;
formatetcIn.dwAspect := DVASPECT_CONTENT;
formatetcIn.lindex := -1;
formatetcIn.tymed := TYMED_HGLOBAL;
if dataObj.GetData(formatetcIn, medium)=S_OK then begin
(* This cast needed because HDROP is incorrectly declared as Longint in ShellAPI.pas. It should be declared as THandle
which is an unsigned integer. Without this fix the routine fails in top-down memory allocation scenarios. *)
dropHandle := HDROP(medium.hGlobal);
SetLength(FileNames, DragQueryFile(dropHandle, $FFFFFFFF, nil, 0));
for i := 0 to high(FileNames) do begin
SetLength(FileNames[i], DragQueryFile(dropHandle, i, nil, 0));
DragQueryFile(dropHandle, i, @FileNames[i][1], Length(FileNames[i])+1);
end;
end;
end;
procedure TDropTarget.SetEffect(var dwEffect: Integer);
begin
if FDropAllowed then begin
dwEffect := DROPEFFECT_COPY;
end else begin
dwEffect := DROPEFFECT_NONE;
end;
end;
function TDropTarget.DragEnter(const dataObj: IDataObject; grfKeyState: Integer; pt: TPoint; var dwEffect: Integer): HResult;
var
FileNames: TArray<string>;
begin
Result := S_OK;
Try
GetFileNames(dataObj, FileNames);
FDropAllowed := (Length(FileNames)>0) and FDragDrop.DropAllowed(FileNames);
SetEffect(dwEffect);
Except
Result := E_UNEXPECTED;
End;
end;
function TDropTarget.DragLeave: HResult;
begin
Result := S_OK;
end;
function TDropTarget.DragOver(grfKeyState: Integer; pt: TPoint; var dwEffect: Integer): HResult;
begin
Result := S_OK;
Try
SetEffect(dwEffect);
Except
Result := E_UNEXPECTED;
End;
end;
function TDropTarget.Drop(const dataObj: IDataObject; grfKeyState: Integer; pt: TPoint; var dwEffect: Integer): HResult;
var
FileNames: TArray<string>;
begin
Result := S_OK;
Try
GetFileNames(dataObj, FileNames);
if Length(FileNames)>0 then begin
FDragDrop.Drop(FileNames);
end;
Except
Application.HandleException(Self);
End;
end;
The idea here is to wrap up the complexity of the Windows IDropTarget
in TDropTarget
. All you need to do is to implement IDragDrop
which is much simpler. Anyway, I think this should get you going.
Create the drop target object from your control's CreateWnd
. Destroy it in the DestroyWnd
method. That point is important because VCL window re-creation means that a control can have its window handle destroyed and re-created during its lifetime.
Note that reference counting on TDropTarget
is suppressed. That is because when RegisterDragDrop
is called it increments the reference count. This creates a circular reference and this code to suppress reference counting breaks that. This means that you would use this class through a class variable rather than an interface variable, in order to avoid leaking.
The usage would look something like this:
type
TMainForm = class(TForm, IDragDrop)
....
private
FDropTarget: TDropTarget;
// implement IDragDrop
function DropAllowed(const FileNames: array of string): Boolean;
procedure Drop(const FileNames: array of string);
protected
procedure CreateWindowHandle; override;
procedure DestroyWindowHandle; override;
end;
....
procedure TMainForm.CreateWindowHandle;
begin
inherited;
FDropTarget := TDropTarget.Create(WindowHandle, Self);
end;
procedure TMainForm.DestroyWindowHandle;
begin
FreeAndNil(FDropTarget);
inherited;
end;
function TMainForm.DropAllowed(const FileNames: array of string): Boolean;
begin
Result := True;
end;
procedure TMainForm.Drop(const FileNames: array of string);
begin
; // do something with the file names
end;
Here I am using a form as the drop target. But you could use any other windowed control in a similar fashion.
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2can some one explain a bit more for me? i can run the code but it dont do anything!! how can i use it in a project? for example how to set up a TPanel to grab files? Mar 13, 2014 at 22:50
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2@peiman I'll add some usage to the answer. That is missing. Sorry. Basically you implement
IDragDrop
in one of your classes. And the pass that to the constructor ofTDropTarget
. Typically you do it in an overridden CreateWnd. Mar 13, 2014 at 23:41 -
2Because windows can get re-created during a form's life @robert Feb 7, 2015 at 19:12
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1@MarusNebunu You need to create an object that implements the
IDragDrop
interface Jul 9, 2015 at 15:16 -
1
If you don't like pure WinAPI, then you can use components. Drag and Drop Component Suite is free with sources.
No, unless you are about to peruse some custom TForm descendant which have this functionality built-in already.
I used David Heffernan's solution as base for my test application and got 'Invalid pointer operation' on application close. The solution for that problem was to change the TDropTarget.Create by adding '_Release;'
constructor TDropTarget.Create(AHandle: HWND; const ADragDrop: IDragDrop);
begin
inherited Create;
FHandle := AHandle;
FDragDrop := ADragDrop;
RegisterDragDrop(FHandle, Self);
_Release;
end;
A discussion about this problem you can see on Embarcadero forum.
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Whatever the problem in your code is, this is not the solution. Your code presumably got the reference counting all wrong. I'm writing this for the sake of future readers so that they don't take this answer at face value. Feb 8, 2015 at 10:03
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5This is indeed the wrong fix, but your are correct that there is a problem. The latest version of the answer solves that problem. Jan 19, 2017 at 13:38
You have to either write code yourself, or install a 3rd party product like DropMaster, which lets you do drag and drop in much older Delphi versions as well.
--jeroen
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That totally depends how fast you write 30 well tested lines of code, that work across a lot of different versions of Windows and other tools that behave like Windows Explorer. Dec 4, 2010 at 19:29
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Well, i dunno... given old API (DragXXX) it stable, compatible with any Windows version and pretty well documented... probably really quick. I have no idea about third-party tool and their bug and quirks, tho... Dec 4, 2010 at 20:34
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118 minutes :) (w/o isolating that behaviour into distinct component) Dec 4, 2010 at 20:39
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1Actually, i'm completely stuck with that isolation concept (because accepting files from the shell is merely a window style, and message handler belongs to window too...) Dec 4, 2010 at 22:25
IDropTarget
manually. For instance, he provides aTDropFileTarget
component for accepting dragged files.