9

I need to "modify" all pasted into TextBox text to be shown in some structured way. I can do it with drag-n-drop, ctrl-v, but how to do it with default context's menu "Paste"?

1 Answer 1

22

While I would normally not suggest dropping to low level Windows API, and this may not be the only way of doing this, it does do the trick:

using System;
using System.Windows.Forms;

public class ClipboardEventArgs : EventArgs
{
    public string ClipboardText { get; set; }
    public ClipboardEventArgs(string clipboardText)
    {
        ClipboardText = clipboardText;
    }
}

class MyTextBox : TextBox
{
    public event EventHandler<ClipboardEventArgs> Pasted;

    private const int WM_PASTE = 0x0302;
    protected override void WndProc(ref Message m)
    {
        if (m.Msg == WM_PASTE)
        {
            var evt = Pasted;
            if (evt != null)
            {
                evt(this, new ClipboardEventArgs(Clipboard.GetText()));
                // don't let the base control handle the event again
                return;
            }
        }

        base.WndProc(ref m);
    }
}

static class Program
{
    /// <summary>
    /// The main entry point for the application.
    /// </summary>
    [STAThread]
    static void Main()
    {
        Application.EnableVisualStyles();
        Application.SetCompatibleTextRenderingDefault(false);

        var tb = new MyTextBox();
        tb.Pasted += (sender, args) => MessageBox.Show("Pasted: " + args.ClipboardText);

        var form = new Form();
        form.Controls.Add(tb);

        Application.Run(form);
    }
}

Ultimately the WinForms toolkit is not very good. It is a thin-ish wrapper around Win32 and the Common Controls. It exposes the 80% of the API that is most useful. The other 20% is often missing or not exposed in a way that is obvious. I would suggest moving away from WinForms and to WPF if possible as WPF seems to be a better architected framework for .NET GUIs.

7
  • thanks, I've just learned sth new (not only how to catch "paste", nut a ne way of doin things)
    – David
    Aug 10, 2010 at 11:09
  • event keyword is missing on Pasted field declaration and why are you using a local variable evt ?
    – Maxence
    Oct 3, 2011 at 9:10
  • You're missing a return inside the if statement which causes the base control to re-handle this event. I was formatting XML on paste and without the return, both the the formatted and unformatted XML show up as the base control handles the paste again.
    – Mrchief
    Dec 23, 2013 at 16:07
  • @Maxence The local variable is to avoid a race condition that can occur between checking if Pasted == null and invoking the handler. If the lone subscriber unsubscribes from the event on another thread between the check and invocation, you could end up with a null reference exception. C# 6 allows Pasted?.Invoke() as an alternative thead-safe solution.
    – itsme86
    May 2, 2017 at 22:39
  • @itsme86 even in C#6 this capturing the variable is important because not only are we preventing the race condition, but we only want to prevent the default behaviour if the Pasted event was registered in the first place. This implementation is therefore still relevant even as we head into C#10. Dec 17, 2021 at 4:04

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