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Is there a way (API) of getting the size (vertical and horizontal) in pixels of the resize corners?

I am referring to the area at each of the corners of a window where you can resize the window in both directions (Left-to-Right and Top-to-Bottom) at the same time using your mouse. You will know you are there with your mouse cursor when you hover over the corners of the window and the mouse cursor is a Diagonal Resizing cursor.

Thank you

Edit: An example: Hover your mouse over the right edge of a sizable window. Start in the middle (vertically) of the window and move the mouse up along the edge until the horizontal sizing cursor changes to a diagonal sizing cursor. How do I determine by asking the OS how far that position when the cursor changes, is from the top of the window.

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  • What is the underlying problem that made you come up with the solution of "I need to get the resize border pixel size"? Are you trying to capture resize events, and isn't there a different (read: easier) way to do that?
    – CodeCaster
    Jul 17, 2013 at 14:08
  • It is baked in the default window procedure if the app doesn't override the WM_NCHITTEST processing. On Win8 it looks like 2x the border height and 1x the border width. The real border size, not the one that Aero lies. Jul 17, 2013 at 15:36
  • @CodeCaster. I want to simulate the behaviour of top-level windows inside a window with controls that I create. I want them to have the exact same behaviour when it comes to resizing and I do not want to try and get the info from an existing window. I prefer to get the size from some API or combined API calls. That is why I asked this question. Jul 18, 2013 at 6:16
  • @Hans. I am struggling to understand exactly what you mean by "It is baked in the default window procedure". Is it something that I can intercept or read in some way? "looks like 2x the border height and 1x the border width"... In Win7 it also does seem so but it stays the same even if the borderwidth (SM_CYSIZEFRAME) is changed. Jul 18, 2013 at 8:56
  • @BlurrySterk: Your comment "I do not want to get the info from an existing window" is entirely contradictory to the question you asked. Perhaps you should ask a new question.
    – Ben Voigt
    Jul 18, 2013 at 12:42

2 Answers 2

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I would suggest to use the size of the scrollbars. Call GetSystemMetrics with SM_CYHSCROLL and SM_CXVSCROLL. May be also SM_CYSIZEFRAME and SM_CXSIZEFRAME sizes can be combined.

But I think a better value is to use the height of the status bar. However even Microsoft Windows seems to use some fixed value as can seen on the screenshot.

enter image description here

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  • I see that your window has a SizeGrip. If you are referring to that then it is not what I require. It is the size of the resize corners in all four corners of the window. Have a look at my edit in my post. Yes, the size of the scrollbar would have been sufficient if I was looking for the SizeGrip size. If I cannot find a definite answer to my specific question then I suppose a workaround would force me to consider the scrollbar size. Thanks for that one. Jul 18, 2013 at 6:29
  • I think what your are looking for is SM_CXSIZEFRAME and SM_CYSIZEFRAME. The surface of the corners is calculated by SM_CXSIZEFRAME * SM_CYSIZEFRAME in this case (if you ignore the size grip as additional diagonal sizing area).
    – bkausbk
    Jul 18, 2013 at 8:19
  • In Windows 7 the Vertical pixel size of the sizing corner is 8 pixels and the horizontal is about double that. And that stays the same irrespective of changes to the borderwidth (SM_CYSIZEFRAME) and caption height (SM_CYCAPTION). As I mentioned to Ben Voight in WinXP it ranges between 25 and 27 in both directions but never leaves that range. So if there is no absolute pattern for theme enabled windows then it might differ between future Windows versions which it has between WinXP and Win7 and thus I cannot make assumptions and an API or SysMetric will make sure I keep to the norm of Windows. Jul 18, 2013 at 8:38
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Comparing the results of GetClientRect and GetWindowRect will tell you how wide the non-client (border) area is along each edge of the window.

If you're concerned that it might not all be active for sizing (true especially along the top), or you want to distinguish the diagonal sizing areas from edge sizing areas, you can take the coordinates discovered in step 1 and pass them to SendMessage(WM_NCHITTEST) See its documentation for the various return codes. There's no problem sending this message repeatedly -- it's designed to be called for each mouse move event and therefore is very fast.

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  • @BlurrySterk: The size of the non-client area isn't the answer to your question... it's a way to get interesting values to query using WM_NCHITTEST which actually does answer your question. WM_NCHITTEST tells you exactly how much of the non-client area is sizing borders and what part of the sizing border is a corner vs edge resize.
    – Ben Voigt
    Jul 18, 2013 at 6:12
  • If you are referring to getting the Non-Client area by using GetClientRect and GetWindowRect; The size of the corners are not related to the Non-Client area unless themes are disabled in which case it is exactly the SM_CYSIZEFRAME + SM_CYCAPTION via GetSystemMetrics. With Themes enabled it has a minimum value if the caption height goes towards small and then it has a maximum if the caption height goes towards large. For instance in Windows XP even if you set the caption height anywhere from 25 to 50 the corner size will stay at 27. At its minimum it will be at 25. Also... Jul 18, 2013 at 6:17
  • I want to simulate the behaviour of top-level windows inside a window with controls that I create. I want them to have the exact same behaviour when it comes to resizing and I do not want to try and get the info from an existing window. I prefer to get the size from some API or combined API calls. That is why I asked this question. Thank you for your suggestion. Jul 18, 2013 at 6:18
  • Wouldn't WM_NCHITTEST require a repetition to acquire what I am looking for if you do not consider where the mouse currently is? Jul 18, 2013 at 6:23
  • @BlurrySterk: I already addressed that in the last sentence of my answer.
    – Ben Voigt
    Jul 18, 2013 at 11:44

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