39

In Windows 8 and Windows 10 before Anniversary update it was possible to show touch keyboard by starting

C:\Program Files\Common Files\microsoft shared\ink\TabTip.exe

It no longer works in Windows 10 Anniversary update; the TabTip.exe process is running, but the keyboard is not shown.

Is there a way to show it programmatically?

UPDATE

I found a workaround - fake mouse click on touch keyboard icon in system tray. Here is code in Delphi

// Find tray icon window
function FindTrayButtonWindow: THandle;
var
  ShellTrayWnd: THandle;
  TrayNotifyWnd: THandle;
begin
  Result := 0;
  ShellTrayWnd := FindWindow('Shell_TrayWnd', nil);
  if ShellTrayWnd > 0 then
  begin
    TrayNotifyWnd := FindWindowEx(ShellTrayWnd, 0, 'TrayNotifyWnd', nil);
    if TrayNotifyWnd > 0 then
    begin
      Result := FindWindowEx(TrayNotifyWnd, 0, 'TIPBand', nil);
    end;
  end;
end;

// Post mouse click messages to it
TrayButtonWindow := FindTrayButtonWindow;
if TrayButtonWindow > 0 then
begin
  PostMessage(TrayButtonWindow, WM_LBUTTONDOWN, MK_LBUTTON, $00010001);
  PostMessage(TrayButtonWindow, WM_LBUTTONUP, 0, $00010001);
end;

UPDATE 2

Another thing I found is that setting this registry key restores old functionality when starting TabTip.exe shows touch keyboard

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\TabletTip\1.7\EnableDesktopModeAutoInvoke=1
13
  • 1
    With every question asking about TabTip.exe, I have to wonder: is there an API that brings up the touch keyboard in a supported fashion?
    – andlabs
    Aug 4, 2016 at 18:45
  • 1
    Searching for TabTip.exe on MSDN brings this up; is this correct? If not, is the input panel Raymond Chen talks about here the same as the one provided by TabTip.exe? I can't check either right now.
    – andlabs
    Aug 4, 2016 at 18:57
  • 3
    Your UPDATE 2 solution does not work for me. What type of key are you creating?
    – E-Bat
    Sep 4, 2016 at 6:38
  • 1
    I created REG_DWORD key
    – EugeneK
    Sep 6, 2016 at 22:50
  • 5
    @E-Bat Make sure you stop/start the tabletinputservice after adding the reg key (or reboot).
    – Mr. Bungle
    Oct 24, 2016 at 23:45

15 Answers 15

33

OK, I reverse engineered what explorer does when the user presses that button in the system tray.

Basically it creates an instance of an undocumented interface ITipInvocation and calls its Toggle(HWND) method, passing desktop window as an argument. As the name suggests, the method either shows or hides the keyboard depending on its current state.

Please note that explorer creates an instance of ITipInvocation on every button click. So I believe the instance should not be cached. I also noticed that explorer never calls Release() on the obtained instance. I'm not too familiar with COM, but this looks like a bug.

I tested this in Windows 8.1, Windows 10 & Windows 10 Anniversary Edition and it works perfectly. Here's a minimal example in C that obviously lacks some error checks.

#include <initguid.h>
#include <Objbase.h>
#pragma hdrstop

// 4ce576fa-83dc-4F88-951c-9d0782b4e376
DEFINE_GUID(CLSID_UIHostNoLaunch,
    0x4CE576FA, 0x83DC, 0x4f88, 0x95, 0x1C, 0x9D, 0x07, 0x82, 0xB4, 0xE3, 0x76);

// 37c994e7_432b_4834_a2f7_dce1f13b834b
DEFINE_GUID(IID_ITipInvocation,
    0x37c994e7, 0x432b, 0x4834, 0xa2, 0xf7, 0xdc, 0xe1, 0xf1, 0x3b, 0x83, 0x4b);

struct ITipInvocation : IUnknown
{
    virtual HRESULT STDMETHODCALLTYPE Toggle(HWND wnd) = 0;
};

int WinMain(HINSTANCE hInst, HINSTANCE hPrevInstance, LPSTR lpCmdLine, int nCmdShow)
{
    HRESULT hr;
    hr = CoInitialize(0);

    ITipInvocation* tip;
    hr = CoCreateInstance(CLSID_UIHostNoLaunch, 0, CLSCTX_INPROC_HANDLER | CLSCTX_LOCAL_SERVER, IID_ITipInvocation, (void**)&tip);
    tip->Toggle(GetDesktopWindow());
    tip->Release();
    return 0;
}

Here's the C# version as well:

class Program
{
    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        var uiHostNoLaunch = new UIHostNoLaunch();
        var tipInvocation = (ITipInvocation)uiHostNoLaunch;
        tipInvocation.Toggle(GetDesktopWindow());
        Marshal.ReleaseComObject(uiHostNoLaunch);
    }

    [ComImport, Guid("4ce576fa-83dc-4F88-951c-9d0782b4e376")]
    class UIHostNoLaunch
    {
    }

    [ComImport, Guid("37c994e7-432b-4834-a2f7-dce1f13b834b")]
    [InterfaceType(ComInterfaceType.InterfaceIsIUnknown)]
    interface ITipInvocation
    {
        void Toggle(IntPtr hwnd);
    }

    [DllImport("user32.dll", SetLastError = false)]
    static extern IntPtr GetDesktopWindow();
}

Update: per @EugeneK comments, I believe that tabtip.exe is the COM server for the COM component in question, so if your code gets REGDB_E_CLASSNOTREG, it should probably run tabtip.exe and try again.

17
  • 1
    This only works for me if TabTip.exe is running, without this process running it fails with 'Class not registered' error.
    – EugeneK
    Dec 5, 2016 at 19:36
  • 2
    Thanks. I'm now trying to find a way to determine and control visibility also. The old "hwnd = FindWindow("IPTip_Main_Window", NULL)" Is no longer completely effective. Testing the returned HWND for null / visibility always returns true. However "PostMessage(hwnd, WM_SYSCOMMAND, (int)SC_CLOSE, 0)" will still hide the OSK.
    – Greg
    Jan 2, 2017 at 7:52
  • 2
    @Greg, to test if the keyboard is open I read the window's style. The keyboard is open if all those three conditions are true: 1) FindWindow returned a non-null value, 2) WS_VISIBLE is set, and 3) WS_DISABLED is NOT set. I might add a code example later
    – torvin
    Jan 2, 2017 at 21:39
  • 3
    The WS_DISABLED check was what I was missing. Now your solution provides a complete work around! To show, I spawn tabtip.exe, then check if not visible and call your ITipInvocation::Toggle if needed.
    – Greg
    Jan 2, 2017 at 23:06
  • 1
    @kayleeFrye_onDeck post a separate question
    – torvin
    Oct 10, 2017 at 22:44
10

I had the same problem too. It took me much time and headache, but Thanks to Alexei and Torvin I finally got it working on Win 10 1709. Visibility check was the difficulty. Maybe The OSKlib Nuget could be updated. Let me sum up the complete sulotion (For sure my code has some unnecessary lines now):

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using System.Diagnostics;
using System.ComponentModel;

using Osklib.Interop;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
using System.Threading;

namespace OSK
{
    public static class OnScreenKeyboard
    {
        static OnScreenKeyboard()
        {
            var version = Environment.OSVersion.Version;
            switch (version.Major)
            {
                case 6:
                    switch (version.Minor)
                    {
                        case 2:
                            // Windows 10 (ok)
                            break;
                    }
                    break;
                default:
                    break;
            }
        }

        private static void StartTabTip()
        {
            var p = Process.Start(@"C:\Program Files\Common Files\Microsoft Shared\ink\TabTip.exe");
            int handle = 0;
            while ((handle = NativeMethods.FindWindow("IPTIP_Main_Window", "")) <= 0)
            {
                Thread.Sleep(100);
            }
        }

        public static void ToggleVisibility()
        {
            var type = Type.GetTypeFromCLSID(Guid.Parse("4ce576fa-83dc-4F88-951c-9d0782b4e376"));
            var instance = (ITipInvocation)Activator.CreateInstance(type);
            instance.Toggle(NativeMethods.GetDesktopWindow());
            Marshal.ReleaseComObject(instance);
        }

        public static void Show()
        {
            int handle = NativeMethods.FindWindow("IPTIP_Main_Window", "");
            if (handle <= 0) // nothing found
            {
                StartTabTip();                
                Thread.Sleep(100);                
            }
            // on some devices starting TabTip don't show keyboard, on some does  ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
            if (!IsOpen())
            {
                ToggleVisibility();
            }
        }

        public static void Hide()
        {
            if (IsOpen())
            {
                ToggleVisibility();
            }
        }        


        public static bool Close()
        {
            // find it
            int handle = NativeMethods.FindWindow("IPTIP_Main_Window", "");
            bool active = handle > 0;
            if (active)
            {
                // don't check style - just close
                NativeMethods.SendMessage(handle, NativeMethods.WM_SYSCOMMAND, NativeMethods.SC_CLOSE, 0);
            }
            return active;
        }

        public static bool IsOpen()
        {
            return GetIsOpen1709() ?? GetIsOpenLegacy();
        }


        [DllImport("user32.dll", SetLastError = false)]
        private static extern IntPtr FindWindowEx(IntPtr parent, IntPtr after, string className, string title = null);

        [DllImport("user32.dll", SetLastError = false)]
        private static extern uint GetWindowLong(IntPtr wnd, int index);

        private static bool? GetIsOpen1709()
        {
            // if there is a top-level window - the keyboard is closed
            var wnd = FindWindowEx(IntPtr.Zero, IntPtr.Zero, WindowClass1709, WindowCaption1709);
            if (wnd != IntPtr.Zero)
                return false;

            var parent = IntPtr.Zero;
            for (;;)
            {
                parent = FindWindowEx(IntPtr.Zero, parent, WindowParentClass1709);
                if (parent == IntPtr.Zero)
                    return null; // no more windows, keyboard state is unknown

                // if it's a child of a WindowParentClass1709 window - the keyboard is open
                wnd = FindWindowEx(parent, IntPtr.Zero, WindowClass1709, WindowCaption1709);
                if (wnd != IntPtr.Zero)
                    return true;
            }
        }

        private static bool GetIsOpenLegacy()
        {
            var wnd = FindWindowEx(IntPtr.Zero, IntPtr.Zero, WindowClass);
            if (wnd == IntPtr.Zero)
                return false;

            var style = GetWindowStyle(wnd);
            return style.HasFlag(WindowStyle.Visible)
                && !style.HasFlag(WindowStyle.Disabled);
        }

        private const string WindowClass = "IPTip_Main_Window";
        private const string WindowParentClass1709 = "ApplicationFrameWindow";
        private const string WindowClass1709 = "Windows.UI.Core.CoreWindow";
        private const string WindowCaption1709 = "Microsoft Text Input Application";

        private enum WindowStyle : uint
        {
            Disabled = 0x08000000,
            Visible = 0x10000000,
        }

        private static WindowStyle GetWindowStyle(IntPtr wnd)
        {
            return (WindowStyle)GetWindowLong(wnd, -16);
        }

    }


    [ComImport]
    [Guid("37c994e7-432b-4834-a2f7-dce1f13b834b")]
    [InterfaceType(ComInterfaceType.InterfaceIsIUnknown)]
    interface ITipInvocation
    {
        void Toggle(IntPtr hwnd);
    }

    internal static class NativeMethods
    {
        [DllImport("user32.dll", EntryPoint = "FindWindow")]
        internal static extern int FindWindow(string lpClassName, string lpWindowName);

        [DllImport("user32.dll", EntryPoint = "SendMessage")]
        internal static extern int SendMessage(int hWnd, uint Msg, int wParam, int lParam);

        [DllImport("user32.dll", EntryPoint = "GetDesktopWindow", SetLastError = false)]
        internal static extern IntPtr GetDesktopWindow();

        [DllImport("user32.dll", EntryPoint = "GetWindowLong")]
        internal static extern int GetWindowLong(int hWnd, int nIndex);

        internal const int GWL_STYLE = -16;
        internal const int GWL_EXSTYLE = -20;        
        internal const int WM_SYSCOMMAND = 0x0112;
        internal const int SC_CLOSE = 0xF060;

        internal const int WS_DISABLED = 0x08000000;

        internal const int WS_VISIBLE = 0x10000000;

    }
}
2
  • 1
    I tested and it did not detect that TapTip was open. Windows 10 Pro x64. ProcessExplorer: C:\Windows\SystemApps\InputApp_cw5n1h2txyewy\WindowsInternal.ComposableShell.Experiences.TextInput.InputApp.exe
    – Nasenbaer
    Feb 20, 2019 at 18:28
  • I have the same problem like @Nasenbaer
    – Faeze
    Aug 19 at 7:21
6

The only solution I've found to work is by sending PostMessage as you've mentioned in answer 1. Here's the C# version of it in case someone needs it.

[DllImport("user32.dll", CharSet = CharSet.Unicode)]
    private static extern IntPtr FindWindow(string sClassName, string sAppName);

[DllImport("user32.dll", CharSet = CharSet.Unicode)]
    static extern IntPtr FindWindowEx(IntPtr parentHandle, IntPtr childAfter, string lclassName, string windowTitle); 

[DllImport("User32.Dll", EntryPoint = "PostMessageA")]
    static extern bool PostMessage(IntPtr hWnd, uint msg, int wParam, int lParam);

var trayWnd = FindWindow("Shell_TrayWnd", null);
var nullIntPtr = new IntPtr(0);

if (trayWnd != nullIntPtr)
{
    var trayNotifyWnd = FindWindowEx(trayWnd, nullIntPtr, "TrayNotifyWnd", null);
    if (trayNotifyWnd != nullIntPtr)
    {
        var tIPBandWnd = FindWindowEx(trayNotifyWnd, nullIntPtr, "TIPBand", null);

        if (tIPBandWnd != nullIntPtr)
        {
            PostMessage(tIPBandWnd, (UInt32)WMessages.WM_LBUTTONDOWN, 1, 65537);
            PostMessage(tIPBandWnd, (UInt32)WMessages.WM_LBUTTONUP, 1, 65537);
        }
    }
}


public enum WMessages : int
{
    WM_LBUTTONDOWN = 0x201,
    WM_LBUTTONUP = 0x202,
    WM_KEYDOWN = 0x100,
    WM_KEYUP = 0x101,
    WH_KEYBOARD_LL = 13,
    WH_MOUSE_LL = 14,
}
4
  • Thanks mikesl, worked perfectly. Just missing declaration for nullIntPtr which I instantiated with var nullIntPtr = IntPtr.Zero;
    – Water
    Sep 26, 2016 at 2:51
  • 2
    While this works, it requires the tray icon to be available. Unfortunately it can be hidden by the user.
    – JimmyBlu
    Sep 27, 2016 at 10:46
  • @mikesl how can use it to show only telephone keypad
    – Rawat
    May 4, 2018 at 8:51
  • This does not work on Windows 8.0. TIPBand is a child of ReBarWindow32, not TrayNotifyWnd.
    – Anders
    Sep 11, 2020 at 21:57
6

I detect 4 situations when trying to open Touch Keyboard on Windows 10 Anniversary Update

  1. Keyboard is Visible - when "IPTIP_Main_Window" is present, NOT disabled and IS visible
  2. Keyboard is not visible - when "IPTIP_Main_Window" is present but disabled
  3. Keyboard is not visible - when "IPTIP_Main_Window" is present but NOT disabled and NOT visible
  4. Keyboard is not visible - when "IPTIP_Main_Window" is NOT present

1 - nothing to do

2+3 - activating via COM

4 - most interesting scenario. In some devices starting TabTip process opens touch keyboard, on some - not. So we must start TabTip process, wait for appearing window "IPTIP_Main_Window", check it for visibility and activate it via COM if nessesary.

I make small library for my project, you can use it - osklib

1
  • I think the varied behaviour between not/opening the keyboard is connected to EnableDesktopModeAutoInvoke registy setting, too. Thanks for the research, and the library!
    – r618
    Oct 6, 2017 at 19:02
5

The following code will always work since it uses latest MS Api
I put it into a dll (Needed for a Delphi project) but it is a plain C
Also useful for obtaining the keyboard size and adjusting application layout

//*******************************************************************
//
// RETURNS KEYBOARD RECTANGLE OR EMPTY ONE IF KEYBOARD IS NOT VISIBLE
//
//*******************************************************************
RECT __stdcall  GetKeyboardRect()
{
    IFrameworkInputPane *inputPane = NULL;
    RECT prcInputPaneScreenLocation = { 0,0,0,0 };
    HRESULT hr = CoInitializeEx(NULL, COINIT_APARTMENTTHREADED);    
    if (SUCCEEDED(hr))
    {
        hr = CoCreateInstance(CLSID_FrameworkInputPane, NULL, CLSCTX_INPROC_SERVER, IID_IFrameworkInputPane, (LPVOID*)&inputPane);
        if (SUCCEEDED(hr))
        {
            hr=inputPane->Location(&prcInputPaneScreenLocation);
            if (!SUCCEEDED(hr))
            {                   
            }
            inputPane->Release();
        }
    }       
    CoUninitialize();   
    return prcInputPaneScreenLocation;
}
1
  • Do you know if you can do this with the dictation toolbar? (WIN + H) Sep 30, 2020 at 17:12
4

There is still some mystery about how the touch keyboard is set visible by Windows 10 Anniversary Update. I'm actually having the exact same issue and here are the lastest infos i've found :

  • Windows 10 1607 works in two modes : Desktop and Tablet. While in Desktop mode, TabTip.exe can be called but won't show. While in Tablet mode, everything works fine : TabTip.exe shows itself when called. So a 100% working workaround is to set your computer in Tablet Mode but who wants his desktop/laptop to work in tablet mode ? Not me anyway !

  • You can use the "EnableDesktopModeAutoInvoke" Key (HKCU, DWORD set to 1) and on some computers running 1607 it worked great while in Desktop Mode. But for some unknown reasons, it is not working on my HP touchpad.

Please note that this registry value is the "Show touch keyboard on desktop mode if there is no attached keyboard" option in Windows parameters > touch

  • You can use Torvin's code to show TabTip.exe (as mentioned TabTip.exe should be running when you do the COM stuff), it is working fine on some computers running 1607 (including my HP touchpad ! yay !) But it will do nothing on some others comps with the same windows Build.

So far tested on 4 different computers and i'm unable to get something working fine on all...

3

The problem seems to be with setting of Windows OS. I have faced same issue with the app I was developing. With Windows 8 and 10 (before update) code that called keyboard worked fine, but after update failed to work. After reading this article, I did following:

  1. Pressed Win+I to open the Settings app

  2. Clicked on Devices > Typing

  3. Turned "Automatically show the touch keyboard in windowed apps when there’s no keyboard attached to your device" ON.

    Right after that keyboard starting showing up in Windows 10 also.

2
  • For me it was Win+I then click on ease of access (hotkey Win+U) under keyboard switch Turns on the on-screen-keyboard to on.
    – surfmuggle
    Apr 2, 2017 at 7:13
  • the easy of access one seems to be a different touch keyboard from tabtip.exe ie without a working tabtip, I cannot use the emoji keyboard - they seem to be linked in some way... but ease of access kb is still available to me, just not tabtip or the button on my task bar which is what op is after
    – Hicsy
    Jan 9 at 4:40
3

Implementing the IValueProvider/ITextProvider in your control is a correct way to achieve this, as described here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/43886052/1184950

3

I tried multiple things that did not work. But I discovered that I can use the Shortcut Keys Windows/Ctrl/O to open the On Screen Key Board.
Also there is a Nuget package: Input Simulator by Michael Noonan.

If you install the InputSimulator NuGet package in your Winforms project - then add code like this to an event, like a button:

private void button1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
    var simu = new InputSimulator();
    simu.Keyboard.ModifiedKeyStroke(new[] { VirtualKeyCode.LWIN, VirtualKeyCode.CONTROL }, VirtualKeyCode.VK_O);
}

You will also need to add these using statements:

using WindowsInput;
using WindowsInput.Native;

Run your app and the button will display the keyboard and also hit it again and it will remove it.

I am on Windows 10 and vs 2019.

1
Set oShell = CreateObject("WScript.Shell")
oShell.AppActivate "Program Manager"
oShell.Run "tabtip.exe", 0, true
oShell.SendKeys "%{TAB}"

[HKEY_CURRENT_USER\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\TabletTip\1.7] "EnableDesktopModeAutoInvoke"=dword:00000001

1

Following code works well on 21h1 version tablet and notebook,thanks for @torvin method

#include <dwmapi.h>
#include <windows.h>

#pragma comment(lib,"dwmapi.lib")

void toggleKeyboardShowState()
{
    if(FindWindowEx(nullptr,nullptr,L"IPTip_Main_Window",nullptr)!=nullptr)
    {
        ITipInvocation *tip_invocation_;
        if(CoCreateInstance(CLSID_UIHostNoLaunch,nullptr,CLSCTX_INPROC_HANDLER|CLSCTX_LOCAL_SERVER,IID_ITipInvocation,(void **)&tip_invocation_)==S_OK)
            tip_invocation_->Toggle(GetDesktopWindow());
        return;
    }
    PVOID OldValue=nullptr;
    BOOL bRet=Wow64DisableWow64FsRedirection(&OldValue);
    ShellExecute(nullptr,L"open",L"C:\\Program Files\\Common Files\\microsoft shared\\ink\\TabTip.exe",nullptr,nullptr,SW_SHOWNORMAL);
    if(bRet)
        Wow64RevertWow64FsRedirection(OldValue);
}

bool keyboardIsShow()
{
    int cloaked=0;
    return DwmGetWindowAttribute(FindWindowExW(FindWindowExW(nullptr,nullptr,L"ApplicationFrameWindow",nullptr),nullptr,L"Windows.UI.Core.CoreWindow",L"Microsoft Text Input Application"),DWMWA_CLOAKED,&cloaked,DWM_CLOAKED_INHERITED)==S_OK?0==cloaked:false;
}

start tabtip process or hide->show

if(!keyboardIsShow())
    toggleKeyboardShowState();

show->hide

if(keyboardIsShow())
    toggleKeyboardShowState();

The keyboard show state can be switched even without if judgment.

0

Use this method:

  1. Create osk.bat file and save it under your program folder ie. C:\My Software\osk.bat

  2. Type in this osk.bat the following cmd:

    "C:\Program Files\Common Files\Microsoft Shared\Ink\Tabtip.exe"

  3. Use Windows Script to run this bat file

    oWSH = CREATEOBJECT("wscript.shell")

    oWSH.Run("osk.bat", 0, .T.)

0

Innovation of Touch Keyboard via TabTip.exe requires the addition of a few values in the registry

Before we invoke TapTip via CMD

"C:\Program Files\Common Files\microsoft shared\ink\TabTip.exe"

Ensure the below values are present in Windows Registry and set to 1 :

  1. SOFTWARE\Microsoft\TabletTip\1.7 - EnableDesktopModeAutoInvoke
  2. SOFTWARE\Microsoft\TabletTip\1.7 - DisableNewKeyboardExperience
  3. HKCU\Software\Microsoft\windows\CurrentVersion\ImmersiveShell - TabletMode

Implementation in JAVA, refer : OnScreenTabletKeyboardInvocation

0

In order to avoid REGDB_E_CLASSNOTREG I've found this c# solution:

Class MyClass
{
      bool tabtipon=false;

      private void RunTabtip()
      {
         if(!tabtipon)
         {
           System.Diagnostics.Process.Start("tabtip.exe");
           tabtipon=true;
         }
         else
         {
           var uiHostNoLaunch = new UIHostNoLaunch();
           var tipInvocation = (ITipInvocation)uiHostNoLaunch;
           tipInvocation.Toggle(GetDesktopWindow());
           Marshal.ReleaseComObject(uiHostNoLaunch);
         }
       }
       [ComImport, Guid("4ce576fa-83dc-4F88-951c-9d0782b4e376")]
       class UIHostNoLaunch
       {
       }

       [ComImport, Guid("37c994e7-432b-4834-a2f7-dce1f13b834b")]
       [InterfaceType(ComInterfaceType.InterfaceIsIUnknown)]
       interface ITipInvocation
       {
         void Toggle(IntPtr hwnd);
       }

       [DllImport("user32.dll", SetLastError = false)]
       static extern IntPtr GetDesktopWindow();


   }
-1

In Win10 Ver 1803, DesktopMode, there is no reliable way to
toggle the "Touch Keyboard" on|off [ ITipInvocation.Toggle() ];
nor can you reliably discover if it's "up" ( on screen )
[ IFrameworkInputPane.Location() ]; both routines fail randomly.

Instead, ensure that "TabTIP.EXE" and "....InputApp.EXE"
only run when the keyboard is "up" ( on screen ).

To toggle the keyboard on and off ( from X.CPP in Jeff-Relf.Me/X.ZIP ):

if ( WM == WM_HOTKEY && C == 'K' ) {

  //  A mouse button takes me here.  Jeff-Relf.Me/g600.PNG

  if ( KillProc = 1, Running( L"TabTIP.EXE" ), KillProc = 1, Running( 
      L"WindowsInternal.ComposableShell.Experiences.TextInput.InputApp.EXE"
  ) )  

    //  The keyboard was _On_ ( i.e. its processes were running ), 
    //  so it was "turned _Off_" (killed); and we're done.

    goto Done ;

  //  The keyboard was _Off_ ( i.e. no running processes ). 
  //  Turn it _On_: 

  Launch( L"%CommonProgramFiles%/microsoft shared/ink/TabTIP.EXE" );
  Sleep(99);

  static const GUID CLSID_UIHostNoLaunch = {  0x4CE576FA, 0x83DC,
    0x4f88,  0x95, 0x1C, 0x9D, 0x07, 0x82, 0xB4, 0xE3, 0x76 };
  static const GUID IID_ITipInvocation = {  0x37c994e7, 0x432b,
    0x4834, 0xa2, 0xf7, 0xdc, 0xe1, 0xf1, 0x3b, 0x83, 0x4b };
  static struct ITipInvocation : IUnknown {  virtual HRESULT 
    STDMETHODCALLTYPE  Toggle( HWND wnd ) = 0 ;  }  * Tog ;

  Tog = 0, CoCreateInstance( CLSID_UIHostNoLaunch, 0, CLSCTX_INPROC_HANDLER
    | CLSCTX_LOCAL_SERVER, IID_ITipInvocation, (void**) & Tog );

  //  Firefox and Chrome need this: 

  Tog ? Tog->Toggle( GetDesktopWindow() ), Tog->Release() : 0 ;    }
- - - - - - - - - - - - -
//  To get the process list, and kill stuff: 
#include <tlhelp32.H>

      int  KillProc ;
int Running( wchar * EXE ) {  int  Found ;  HANDLE  PIDs, aProc ;
  PROCESSENTRY32  aPID = { sizeof aPID };
  PIDs = CreateToolhelp32Snapshot( TH32CS_SNAPPROCESS, 0 );
  Process32First( PIDs, &aPID );
  while ( Found = !strCmpI( aPID.szExeFile, EXE ),
    KillProc && Found && ( 
      aProc = OpenProcess( PROCESS_TERMINATE, 0, aPID.th32ProcessID ),
      aProc ? TerminateProcess( aProc, 9 ), CloseHandle( aProc ) : 0 ),
    !Found && Process32Next( PIDs, &aPID ) );

  KillProc = 0, CloseHandle( PIDs );  return  Found ;   }


Launch( wchar * Cmd ) {  wchar _Cmd[333];  static PROCESS_INFORMATION Stat ;
  static STARTUPINFO SU = { sizeof SU };
  SetEnvironmentVariable( L"__compat_layer", L"RunAsInvoker" );
  ExpandEnvironmentStrings( Cmd, _Cmd, 333 ), Cmd = _Cmd ;
  if ( CreateProcess( 0, Cmd, 0,0,1,0,0,0, &SU , &Stat ) )
    CloseHandle( Stat.hProcess ), CloseHandle( Stat.hThread );  }

//  CoInitialize(0);
4
  • 3
    When posting an answer that contains code, please include an explanation of what the code does and how it answers the user's question. Answers consisting of nothing but code are strongly discouraged. Jul 26, 2018 at 23:12
  • The problem, asked at least three times, on three different pages, is that the keyboard toggle ( ITipInvocation.Toggle() ) does NOT ( N O T ) always work ( Win10 desktop Ver 1803 ). I, and only I, have provided the soltion. My solution is well tested, it works. I commented the code... did you read the comments, Jim ? !
    – Jeff Relf
    Jul 26, 2018 at 23:27
  • 5
    Rather than getting snippy, you should learn to accept constructive criticism from users that are experienced with the site. Code comments are not a substitute for providing a textual explanation. Your experience here will be vastly improved if you learn to accept advice that is intended to help you.
    – Ken White
    Jul 27, 2018 at 0:48
  • This is temporarily locked while it's being discussed on meta.
    – user3956566
    Jul 30, 2018 at 16:02

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