3

I'm trying to send messages to a window that says Ctrl and Up-arrow has been pressed. I've got the basics down, I can send presses of the space key that registeres fine. But I can't seem to get the ctrl+ working. chosen code snippets:

[DllImport("user32.dll", CharSet = CharSet.Auto, SetLastError = false)]
static extern IntPtr SendMessage(IntPtr hWnd, int Msg, int wParam, int lParam);

Now this works fine for sending Space:

public static void SendKeyPress(IntPtr handle, VKeys key)
{
    SendMessage(handle, (int) WMessages.WM_KEYDOWN, (int) key, 0);
    SendMessage(handle, (int)WMessages.WM_KEYUP, (int)key, 0);
}

But this doesn't work for sending Ctrl+ to VLC to increase the sound volume:

public static void SendKeyPress(IntPtr handle, VKeys key, bool control)
{
    int lParamKeyDown = 0;
    lParamKeyDown |= 1;
    lParamKeyDown |= 1 << 24;

    int lParamKeyUp = lParamKeyDown;
    lParamKeyUp |= 1 << 30;
    lParamKeyUp |= 1 << 31; //it was down before

    int lParamCtrlDown = lParamKeyDown;
    int lParamCtrlUp = lParamKeyUp;

    lParamKeyDown |= (int)MapVirtualKey((uint)key, 0) << 16;
    lParamKeyUp |= (int)MapVirtualKey((uint)key, 0) << 16;
    lParamCtrlDown |= (int)MapVirtualKey((uint)VKeys.VK_CONTROL, 0) << 16;
    lParamCtrlUp |= (int)MapVirtualKey((uint)VKeys.VK_CONTROL, 0) << 16;

    IntPtr controlPtr = new IntPtr((int)VKeys.VK_CONTROL);
    IntPtr lParamCtrlDownPtr = new IntPtr(lParamCtrlDown);
    IntPtr lParamCtrlUpPtr = new IntPtr(lParamCtrlUp);
    IntPtr lParamKeyDownPtr = new IntPtr(lParamKeyDown);
    IntPtr lParamKeyUpPtr = new IntPtr(lParamKeyUp);
    IntPtr keyPtr = new IntPtr((int)key);
    object o = new object();
    HandleRef wndRef = new HandleRef(o, handle);
    PostMessage(wndRef, (uint)WMessages.WM_KEYDOWN, controlPtr, lParamCtrlDownPtr);
    PostMessage(wndRef, (uint) WMessages.WM_KEYDOWN, keyPtr, lParamKeyDownPtr);

    PostMessage(wndRef, (uint) WMessages.WM_KEYUP, controlPtr, lParamCtrlUpPtr);
    PostMessage(wndRef, (uint) WMessages.WM_KEYUP, keyPtr, lParamKeyUpPtr);
 }

What am I missing?

Edit3: The Messages are exactly the same and there are no extra messages since I switched to PostMessage but VLC still won't increase or decrease the volume.

It's not just VLC either, Spotify won't accept the same command even though the messagess look exactly alike in Spy++.

3
  • AutoIt is pretty reliable at sending key strokes and has a library/API that would allow you to send keyboard commands from C#. I don't have any code off hand though.
    – AaronLS
    Apr 30, 2010 at 17:06
  • You're not pressing CTRL UP, you're pressing UP CTRL!
    – NibblyPig
    Apr 30, 2010 at 17:08
  • AaronLS: Would prefer to not use third part libraries for something this small. SLC: There, forgot to update the code. The version I'm testing is the one currently shown, first Ctrl and then Up. Sorry for the mistake.
    – dutt
    Apr 30, 2010 at 17:52

3 Answers 3

4

I don't have a great way to test it, but would it work if the order of these two lines:

SendMessage(handle, (int) WMessages.WM_KEYDOWN, (int) key, 0);
SendMessage(handle, (int) WMessages.WM_KEYDOWN, (int)VKeys.VK_CONTROL, 0);

was changed to:

SendMessage(handle, (int) WMessages.WM_KEYDOWN, (int)VKeys.VK_CONTROL, 0);
SendMessage(handle, (int) WMessages.WM_KEYDOWN, (int) key, 0);

so that the control key being down essentially wraps the press of the other key?

3
  • 1
    I agree, send Ctrl down, the key down, the key up, Ctrl up, just as if someone were pressing the keys.
    – wallyk
    Apr 30, 2010 at 15:57
  • I do not think that this works, although this order of commands is far more obvious than the original one. Apr 30, 2010 at 16:01
  • As Andreas said, this does not work. But it is neater so I left the code like that.
    – dutt
    Apr 30, 2010 at 17:45
2

I found a working solution. You use the SetKeyboardState function to depress the control key, and then you can send any key you want. This Delphi code sends Ctrl+Right to a Memo component.

var
  s: TKeyboardState;
  PrevState: byte;
begin
  GetKeyboardState(s);
  PrevState := s[VK_CONTROL];
  s[VK_CONTROL] := 128;
  SetKeyboardState(s);
  SendMessage(Memo1.Handle, WM_KEYDOWN, VK_RIGHT, 0);
  s[VK_CONTROL] := PrevState;
  SetKeyboardState(s)
end;
3
  • Doesn't seem to work. I'm trying to send a Ctrl+Up to VLC to increase the volume but it doesn't register.
    – dutt
    Apr 30, 2010 at 17:02
  • OK. SetKeyboardState does only change the state for the current thread. So this code will definitely not work in the case of inter-process communication. Apr 30, 2010 at 17:04
  • Ah, well that explains that then. Added the inter-process clarification to the question for clarification.
    – dutt
    Apr 30, 2010 at 17:49
2

I now found a method to send Ctrl+Right (for example) to a window of another process. If hEdit is the handle of the window, then the following code works.

AttachThreadInput(GetCurrentThreadID, GetWindowThreadProcessId(hEdit, 0), true);
hEdit := SetFocus(hEdit);

keybd_event(VK_CONTROL, 0, 0, 0);
keybd_event(VK_RIGHT, 0, 0, 0);
keybd_event(VK_RIGHT, 0, KEYEVENTF_KEYUP, 0);
keybd_event(VK_CONTROL, 0, KEYEVENTF_KEYUP, 0);

SetFocus(hEdit); // restore focus
AttachThreadInput(GetCurrentThreadID, GetWindowThreadProcessId(hEdit, 0), false); // "Disconnect"

Update

The drawback of this method is that the focus is changed for a small duration of time. In fact, the best solution, I believe, is a combination of my previous and this post:

var
  s: TKeyboardState;
  PrevState: byte;

AttachThreadInput(GetCurrentThreadID, GetWindowThreadProcessId(hEdit, 0), true);

GetKeyboardState(s);
PrevState := s[VK_CONTROL];
s[VK_CONTROL] := 128;
SetKeyboardState(s);
SendMessage(hEdit, WM_KEYDOWN, VK_RIGHT, 0);
s[VK_CONTROL] := PrevState;
SetKeyboardState(s);

AttachThreadInput(GetCurrentThreadID, GetWindowThreadProcessId(hEdit, 0), false);
1
  • Thanks, unfortunatly neither of these methods appear to work. I tried your AttachThreadInput wrapping around a SendInput-application and that didn't work either. I know I'm sending to the right window, sending Space pauses/resumes, and the messages are exactly alike according to Spy++. What else could differ?
    – dutt
    May 1, 2010 at 7:51

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