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Overview |
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Group |
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Quick Info
Windows NT
| Yes
| Win95
| Yes
| Win32s
| Yes
| Import Library
| user32.lib
| Header File
| winuser.h
| Unicode
| WinNT
| Platform Notes
| hMenu limited to WORD on Win32s
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CreateWindowEx
The
CreateWindowEx function creates an overlapped, pop-up, or child window with an extended
style; otherwise, this function is identical to the
CreateWindow function. For more information about creating a window and for full
descriptions of the other parameters of
CreateWindowEx, see
CreateWindow.
HWND CreateWindowEx(
DWORD dwExStyle,
| // extended window style
|
LPCTSTR lpClassName,
| // pointer to registered class name
|
LPCTSTR lpWindowName,
| // pointer to window name
|
DWORD dwStyle,
| // window style
|
int x,
| // horizontal position of window
|
int y,
| // vertical position of window
|
int nWidth,
| // window width
|
int nHeight,
| // window height
|
HWND hWndParent,
| // handle to parent or owner window
|
HMENU hMenu,
| // handle to menu, or child-window identifier
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HINSTANCE hInstance,
| // handle to application instance
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LPVOID lpParam
| // pointer to window-creation data
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);
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Parameters
dwExStyle
Specifies the extended style of the window. This parameter can be one of the
following values:
Style
| Meaning
|
WS_EX_ACCEPTFILES
| Specifies that a window created with this style accepts drag-drop files.
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WS_EX_APPWINDOW
| Forces a top-level window onto the taskbar when the window is minimized.
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WS_EX_CLIENTEDGE
| Specifies that a window has a border with a sunken edge.
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WS_EX_CONTEXTHELP
| Includes a question mark in the title bar of the window. When the user clicks
the question mark, the cursor changes to a question mark with a pointer. If the
user then clicks a child window, the child receives a WM_HELP message. The
child window should pass the message to the parent window procedure, which should
call the WinHelp function using the HELP_WM_HELP command. The Help application displays a
pop-up window that typically contains help for the child window.
WS_EX_CONTEXTHELP cannot be used with the WS_MAXIMIZEBOX or WS_MINIMIZEBOX
styles.
|
WS_EX_CONTROLPARENT
| Allows the user to navigate among the child windows of the window by using the TAB key.
|
WS_EX_DLGMODALFRAME
| Creates a window that has a double border; the window can, optionally, be
created with a title bar by specifying the WS_CAPTION style in the dwStyle parameter.
|
WS_EX_LEFT
| Window has generic "left-aligned" properties. This is the default.
|
WS_EX_LEFTSCROLLBAR
| If the shell language is Hebrew, Arabic, or another language that supports
reading order alignment, the vertical scroll bar (if present) is to the left of
the client area. For other languages, the style is ignored and not treated as an
error.
|
WS_EX_LTRREADING
| The window text is displayed using Left to Right reading-order properties.
This is the default.
|
WS_EX_MDICHILD
| Creates an MDI child window.
|
WS_EX_NOPARENTNOTIFY
| Specifies that a child window created with this style does not send the WM_PARENTNOTIFY message to its parent window when it is created or destroyed.
|
WS_EX_OVERLAPPEDWINDOW
| Combines the WS_EX_CLIENTEDGE and WS_EX_WINDOWEDGE styles.
|
WS_EX_PALETTEWINDOW
| Combines the WS_EX_WINDOWEDGE, WS_EX_TOOLWINDOW, and WS_EX_TOPMOST styles.
|
WS_EX_RIGHT
| Window has generic "right-aligned" properties. This depends on the window
class. This style has an effect only if the shell language is Hebrew, Arabic, or
another language that supports reading order alignment; otherwise, the style is
ignored and not treated as an error.
|
WS_EX_RIGHTSCROLLBAR
| Vertical scroll bar (if present) is to the right of the client area. This is
the default.
|
WS_EX_RTLREADING
| If the shell language is Hebrew, Arabic, or another language that supports
reading order alignment, the window text is displayed using Right to Left
reading-order properties. For other languages, the style is ignored and not treated as
an error.
|
WS_EX_STATICEDGE
| Creates a window with a three-dimensional border style intended to be used for
items that do not accept user input.
|
WS_EX_TOOLWINDOW
| Creates a tool window; that is, a window intended to be used as a floating
toolbar. A tool window has a title bar that is shorter than a normal title bar,
and the window title is drawn using a smaller font. A tool window does not appear
in the taskbar or in the dialog that appears when the user presses ALT+TAB.
|
WS_EX_TOPMOST
| Specifies that a window created with this style should be placed above all
non-topmost windows and should stay above them, even when the window is
deactivated. To add or remove this style, use the SetWindowPos function.
|
WS_EX_TRANSPARENT
| Specifies that a window created with this style is to be transparent. That is,
any windows that are beneath the window are not obscured by the window. A
window created with this style receives WM_PAINT messages only after all sibling windows beneath it have been updated.
|
WS_EX_WINDOWEDGE
| Specifies that a window has a border with a raised edge.
|
Using the WS_EX_RIGHT style for static or edit controls has the same effect as
using the SS_RIGHT or ES_RIGHT style, respectively. Using this style with
button controls has the same effect as using BS_RIGHT and BS_RIGHTBUTTON styles.
lpClassName
Points to a null-terminated string or is an integer atom. If
lpClassName is an atom, it must be a global atom created by a previous call to
GlobalAddAtom. The atom, a 16-bit value less than 0xC000, must be in the low-order word of
lpClassName; the high-order word must be zero.
If
lpClassName is a string, it specifies the window class name. The class name can be any
name registered with the
RegisterClass function or any of the predefined control-class names.
lpWindowName
Points to a null-terminated string that specifies the window name.
dwStyle
Specifies the style of the window being created. For a list of the window
styles that can be specified in
dwStyle, see
CreateWindow.
x
Specifies the initial horizontal position of the window. For an overlapped or
pop-up window, the
x parameter is the initial x-coordinate of the window's upper-left corner, in
screen coordinates. For a child window,
x is the x-coordinate of the upper-left corner of the window relative to the
upper-left corner of the parent window's client area.
If
x is set to CW_USEDEFAULT, Windows selects the default position for the
window's upper-left corner and ignores the
y parameter. CW_USEDEFAULT is valid only for overlapped windows; if it is
specified for a pop-up or child window, the
x and
y parameters are set to zero.
y
Specifies the initial vertical position of the window. For an overlapped or
pop-up window, the
y parameter is the initial y-coordinate of the window's upper-left corner, in
screen coordinates. For a child window,
y is the initial y-coordinate of the upper-left corner of the child window
relative to the upper-left corner of the parent window's client area. For a list
box,
y is the initial y-coordinate of the upper-left corner of the list box's client
area relative to the upper-left corner of the parent window's client area.
If an overlapped window is created with the WS_VISIBLE style bit set and the
x parameter is set to CW_USEDEFAULT, Windows ignores the
y parameter.
nWidth
Specifies the width, in device units, of the window. For overlapped windows,
nWidth is the window's width, in screen coordinates, or CW_USEDEFAULT. If
nWidth is CW_USEDEFAULT, Windows selects a default width and height for the window;
the default width extends from the initial x-coordinates to the right edge of
the screen; the default height extends from the initial y-coordinate to the top
of the icon area. CW_USEDEFAULT is valid only for overlapped windows; if
CW_USEDEFAULT is specified for a pop-up or child window, the
nWidth and
nHeight parameter are set to zero.
nHeight
Specifies the height, in device units, of the window. For overlapped windows,
nHeight is the window's height, in screen coordinates. If the
nWidth parameter is set to CW_USEDEFAULT, Windows ignores
nHeight.
hWndParent
Identifies the parent or owner window of the window being created. A valid
window handle must be supplied when a child window or an owned window is created.
A child window is confined to the client area of its parent window. An owned
window is an overlapped window that is destroyed when its owner window is
destroyed or hidden when its owner is minimized; it is always displayed on top of its
owner window. Although this parameter must specify a valid handle if the
dwStyle parameter includes the WS_CHILD style, it is optional if
dwStyle includes the WS_POPUP style.
hMenu
Identifies a menu, or specifies a child-window identifier, depending on the
window style. For an overlapped or pop-up window,
hMenu identifies the menu to be used with the window; it can be NULL if the class
menu is to be used. For a child window,
hMenu specifies the child-window identifier, an integer value used by a dialog box
control to notify its parent about events. The application determines the
child-window identifier; it must be unique for all child windows with the same
parent window.
hInstance
Identifies the instance of the module to be associated with the window.
lpParam
Points to a value passed to the window through the
CREATESTRUCT structure referenced by the
lParam parameter of the WM_CREATE message. If an application calls
CreateWindow to create a multiple document interface client window,
lpParam must point to a
CLIENTCREATESTRUCT structure.
Return Values
If the function succeeds, the return value is the handle to the new window.
If the function fails, the return value is NULL.
Remarks
The
CreateWindowEx function sends WM_NCCREATE, WM_NCCALCSIZE, and WM_CREATE messages to the
window being created.
For information about the window control classes, window styles, and control
styles used with this function, see the description of the
CreateWindow function.
Windows 95: The system can support a maximum of 16,364 window handles.
See Also
CLIENTCREATESTRUCT,
CREATESTRUCT,
CreateWindow,
GlobalAddAtom,
RegisterClass,
SetWindowPos,
WM_CREATE,
WM_NCCALCSIZE,
WM_NCCREATE,
WM_PAINT,
WM_PARENTNOTIFY
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