15

Is there a way by which we can find out if a clip board paste event occurred in a rich text box? This event would be used in order to do certain stuff, with the pasted block of text.

thanks

Here is my code

 protected override void WndProc(ref System.Windows.Forms.Message m)
    {
        if (m.Msg == WM_PASTE)
        {
            OnPasteOccurred();
            MessageBox.Show("Pas");
        }
        if (m.Msg == 0x000F)
        {
            if (PaintControl)
            {
                base.WndProc(ref m);
            }
            else
            {
                m.Result = IntPtr.Zero;
            }
        }
        else
        {
            base.WndProc(ref m);
        }
    }

Edit

I wish to do some syntax highlighting or indentation based on paste events, something which this particular code editor seems to be doing very efficiently. I don't know how it is doing it. Would require help in this particular direction. I am pretty sure that there must some native Win32 code or something like that can be intercepted. I have tried tracking down keys, mouse events and it is not pretty.

4
  • A quick web search reveals that RichTextBox doesn't handle paste events by sending WM_PASTE to itself. So I'm out of ideas. Apr 11, 2011 at 9:12
  • You may be able to wrap the control in your own custom class and override the Paste method. This is, of course, assuming that's the method being called on a paste. Apr 14, 2011 at 15:04
  • Hmm, in .NET 2.0, you cannot override the paste() method, and probably the reason is given by @David above. Apr 15, 2011 at 5:56
  • Can't you just check if your rich text control has focus and if it has, then paste was in it? Apr 12, 2012 at 12:08

3 Answers 3

19

It's a little bit tricky to detect a paste operation in the RichTextBox.

First solution may be to detect the WM_PASTE message overriding the WndProc but unfortunately the control doesn't send that message to itself when it performs a paste operation.

Naïve detection

To detect the keyboard events may work (you have to override the OnKeyDown function) then check if the key combinations (CTRL+V and SHIFT+INS). Something like this:

protected override OnKeyDown(KeyEventArgs e)
{
     bool ctrlV = e.Modifiers == Keys.Control && e.KeyCode == Keys.V;
     bool shiftIns = e.Modifiers == Keys.Shift && e.KeyCode == Keys.Insert;

     if (ctrlV || shiftIns)
         DoSomething();
}

It works well but you can't catch the paste operation made using the mouse (right click to open the context menu) and the paste operations made via drag & drop. If you do not need them you can use this solution (at least it's simply and straightforward).

Better detection

Assumption: when user types inside the RichTextBox he inserts one character per time. How can you use this? Well, when you detect a bigger change you detected a paste operation because user can't type more than once character per time (ok, you can argue that it's not always true because of Unicode surrogates). See also VB.NET version and more details about Unicode stuff.

private int _previousLength = 0;

private void richTextBox_TextChanged(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
   int currentLength = richTextBox.Text.Length;
   if (Math.Abs(currentLength - _previousLength) > 1)
      ProcessAllLines();

   _previousLength = currentLength;
}

Please note that you can't (because of how different IMEs work) use OnKeyDown (or similar). This works well only for western languages but it has problems with Unicode stuff (because, for example, String.Length property may be increased by two Char when user typed a single character. See also this post for much more details about this (well it's a strongly suggested reading even, even if - in this case - you don't care about it). In that post you'll also find code for a better algorithm to determine string length. In short you have to replace:

   int currentLength = richTextBox.Text.Length;

With this:

   int currentLength = StringInfo.GetTextElementEnumerator(richTextBox.Text)
       .Cast<string>()
       .Count();

After all this effort you may realize that...user can even paste a single character and it may go undetected. You're right, that's why this is a better detection instead of a perfect solution.

Perfect solution

The perfect solution (if you're running on Windows 8) of course exists, the native rich edit control sends an EN_CLIPFORMAT notification message. It's intended to notify a rich edit control's parent window that a paste occurred with a particular clipboard format. You can then override the WndProc of its parent to detect the WM_NOTIFY message for this notification. Anyway it's not few lines of code, check this MSDN article for details.

12
  • isn't the msdn one applying to windows 8 only? May 18, 2012 at 0:20
  • @redDragonzz sadly...yes, that's a notification message for Windows 8 only. I'll update my answer to make it clear! May 18, 2012 at 7:20
  • @redDragonzz update: I guess a "true" syntax highligh algorithm won't suffer for poor performance 'cause he won't work on the full text and it'll do it in background on another thread while you're typing. Did you take a look to the code of the (old) SharpDevelop IDE? They did provide both colors and intellisense. May 20, 2012 at 21:25
  • Context menus aren't standard on the rich text box, though, and neither is drag and drop. You can perfectly control any pasting done through that. As far as I know only the shortcuts really need checking.
    – Nyerguds
    Feb 17, 2016 at 9:50
  • 1
    @Nyerguds yes, it is! Actually I like that topic (self-advertising: stackoverflow.com/a/27229590/1207195) but yes it's a source of thousands issues and headaches! Feb 19, 2016 at 8:35
1

Starting from .Net 3.0, there is a built-in method to detect the paste event:

DataObject.AddPastingHandler(this, OnPaste);

Just call this method in the constructor. If you want for example handle the paste event yourself as if the user entered the text manually, you can use

private void OnPaste(object sender, DataObjectPastingEventArgs e)
{
    if (e.DataObject.GetDataPresent(typeof(string)))
    {
        var text = (string)e.DataObject.GetData(typeof(string));
        var composition = new TextComposition(InputManager.Current, this, text);
        TextCompositionManager.StartComposition(composition);
    }

    e.CancelCommand();
}
1
  • 3
    Isn't this WPF not winforms? Oct 14, 2014 at 9:12
0

I came across this old question and I would like to share my solution (it's VB but can it be easily converted). I use it to force paste as plain text when needed:

Protected Overrides Sub OnKeyDown(e As KeyEventArgs)
    If ForcePasteAsPlainText And ((e.Control = True And e.KeyCode = Keys.V) Or (e.Shift = True And e.KeyCode = Keys.Insert)) Then
        MyBase.Paste(DataFormats.GetFormat(DataFormats.Text))
        e.Handled = True
        Return
    End If
    MyBase.OnKeyDown(e)
End Sub

Shadows Sub Paste()
    If ForcePasteAsPlainText Then
        MyBase.Paste(DataFormats.GetFormat(DataFormats.Text))
    Else
        MyBase.Paste()
    End If
End Sub

Shadows Sub Paste(clipFormat As DataFormats.Format)
    If ForcePasteAsPlainText Then
        MyBase.Paste(DataFormats.GetFormat(DataFormats.Text))
    Else
        MyBase.Paste(clipFormat)
    End If
End Sub

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