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Recipe 7.11 Using Windows Hooks to Manipulate the MouseProblemMany new mice have more than just a left and right button. Nowadays mice come with several additional buttons and a mouse wheel. You need to allow your application to take advantage of these new mice features. Additionally, you might need to know where the current location of the mouse is on a particular window, whether it is on the client area of the window (where your menus, toolbars, and controls are placed in the window), the nonclient area of the window (window border, title bar, close button, etc.), or the x and y coordinates of the mouse pointer. SolutionUse the mouse events that are built into the System.Windows.Forms.Form class. DiscussionThere are seven mouse events that exist in the System.Windows.Forms.Form class. These are, in the order in which they occur:
Most of these events accept a MouseEventArgs object that contains all the information about the mouse when the event is raised. The MouseEventArgs class contains the following data:
Your code can make use of any one or more of these events on the Form class along with the MouseEventArgs object. See AlsoSee Recipe 7.10; Subclassing & Hooking with Visual Basic by Stephen Teilhet (O'Reilly); see the "Form Class," "MouseEventArgs Class," "Control.MouseDown Event," "Control.MouseEnter Event," "Control.MouseHover Event," "Control.MouseLeave Event," "Control.MouseMove Event," "Control.MouseWheel Event," "Control.MouseUp Event," and "Control.MouseMove Event" topics in the MSDN documentation. |
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