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Pop Up loading message

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  • A acerunner316

    So after implementing the create and destroy loading window, it didn't show up. So I added the line pLoadingDlg->ShowWindow(SW_SHOW); Now the window shows up, but when done loading, and the window is destroyed, the focus doesn't return to the main window. How can I fix that? I tried usins popup and overlap style, and it has the same problem. Using the child style, the loading window doesn't even show up. -- modified at 18:56 Monday 27th November, 2006

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    Mark Salsbery
    wrote on last edited by
    #7

    acerunner316 wrote:

    after implementing the create and destroy loading window, it didn't show up

    For the dalog resource: Style should be Child. Set the Visible property to TRUE.

    acerunner316 wrote:

    when done loading, and the window is destroyed, the focus doesn't return to the main window

    Try this: HWND hwndOldForeground = ::GetForegroundWindow(); EnableWindow(FALSE); CLoading *pLoadingDlg = new CLoading; pLoadingDlg->Create(IDD_LOADING,this); ... ... pLoadingDlg->DestroyWindow(); delete pLoadingDlg; pLoadingDlg = 0; EnableWindow(TRUE); if (hwndOldForeground) { ::SetForegroundWindow(hwndOldForeground); hwndOldForeground = 0; }

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    • M Mark Salsbery

      acerunner316 wrote:

      after implementing the create and destroy loading window, it didn't show up

      For the dalog resource: Style should be Child. Set the Visible property to TRUE.

      acerunner316 wrote:

      when done loading, and the window is destroyed, the focus doesn't return to the main window

      Try this: HWND hwndOldForeground = ::GetForegroundWindow(); EnableWindow(FALSE); CLoading *pLoadingDlg = new CLoading; pLoadingDlg->Create(IDD_LOADING,this); ... ... pLoadingDlg->DestroyWindow(); delete pLoadingDlg; pLoadingDlg = 0; EnableWindow(TRUE); if (hwndOldForeground) { ::SetForegroundWindow(hwndOldForeground); hwndOldForeground = 0; }

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      acerunner316
      wrote on last edited by
      #8

      Setting the style to child does not work. The popup window does not show up at all. The Visible property is already checked. The code to SetForeground code does not work. I also tried SetFocus(), but that didn't work either. Any other clever ideas?

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      • A acerunner316

        Setting the style to child does not work. The popup window does not show up at all. The Visible property is already checked. The code to SetForeground code does not work. I also tried SetFocus(), but that didn't work either. Any other clever ideas?

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        Mark Salsbery
        wrote on last edited by
        #9

        hmmm I tested the code before I posted it. Are you using the correct parent window when creating the dialog window?

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        • A acerunner316

          Setting the style to child does not work. The popup window does not show up at all. The Visible property is already checked. The code to SetForeground code does not work. I also tried SetFocus(), but that didn't work either. Any other clever ideas?

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          Scott Holt
          wrote on last edited by
          #10

          Setting the style to "Child" does not work because, when you disable a window, Windows will automatically disable its child windows as well. When you used SetFocus, did you do it as follows: HWND hwndSaveFocus = GetFocus() ; ... (display dialog and delete when done) ... SetFocus(hwndsaveFocus) ; Scott

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          • S Scott Holt

            Setting the style to "Child" does not work because, when you disable a window, Windows will automatically disable its child windows as well. When you used SetFocus, did you do it as follows: HWND hwndSaveFocus = GetFocus() ; ... (display dialog and delete when done) ... SetFocus(hwndsaveFocus) ; Scott

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            acerunner316
            wrote on last edited by
            #11

            hwndSaveFocus = GetFocus(); that gives me the error: error C2440: '=' : cannot convert from 'class CWnd *' to 'struct HWND__ *

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            • M Mark Salsbery

              hmmm I tested the code before I posted it. Are you using the correct parent window when creating the dialog window?

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              acerunner316
              wrote on last edited by
              #12

              How do i know if i'm using the correct parent window? When created the "loading..." dialog window, i just inserted a new dialog in the resource editor. And then opened class wizard to generate a new class for the new dialog. And the rest of the code, you pretty much know already.

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              • A acerunner316

                How do i know if i'm using the correct parent window? When created the "loading..." dialog window, i just inserted a new dialog in the resource editor. And then opened class wizard to generate a new class for the new dialog. And the rest of the code, you pretty much know already.

                M Offline
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                Mark Salsbery
                wrote on last edited by
                #13

                You are passing "this" as the parent. I don't know what class you are creating the dialog in. For example, if it is a CFrameWnd derived then you may need to pass the client window as the parent. pLoadingDlg->Create(IDD_LOADING,this); By the way, as Scott mentioned, child windows do get disabled when you disable the parent. This doesn't affect the visiblility of any windows. I disabled the main window in my example to prevent the user from doing anything until the operation completes, which is the Microsoft recommended method. Of course, you can do what you want with the UI as you need to. This does work :) Here's the dialog resource I tested with: IDD_STATUS DIALOGEX 0, 0, 186, 25 STYLE DS_SETFONT | DS_MODALFRAME | DS_FIXEDSYS | WS_CHILD | WS_VISIBLE EXSTYLE WS_EX_STATICEDGE FONT 8, "MS Shell Dlg", 400, 0, 0x1 BEGIN CTEXT "Test Status",IDC_STATIC,15,7,156,12 END

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                • M Mark Salsbery

                  You are passing "this" as the parent. I don't know what class you are creating the dialog in. For example, if it is a CFrameWnd derived then you may need to pass the client window as the parent. pLoadingDlg->Create(IDD_LOADING,this); By the way, as Scott mentioned, child windows do get disabled when you disable the parent. This doesn't affect the visiblility of any windows. I disabled the main window in my example to prevent the user from doing anything until the operation completes, which is the Microsoft recommended method. Of course, you can do what you want with the UI as you need to. This does work :) Here's the dialog resource I tested with: IDD_STATUS DIALOGEX 0, 0, 186, 25 STYLE DS_SETFONT | DS_MODALFRAME | DS_FIXEDSYS | WS_CHILD | WS_VISIBLE EXSTYLE WS_EX_STATICEDGE FONT 8, "MS Shell Dlg", 400, 0, 0x1 BEGIN CTEXT "Test Status",IDC_STATIC,15,7,156,12 END

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                  acerunner316
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #14

                  this is what i have: pLoadingDlg->Create(IDD_LOADING,this); IDD_LOADING is configured as Style: child, Border: dialog frame, title bar, visible, tool window. Is this correct? The Loading dialog still doesn't show up. But the main window is disabled as expected. I can't click anything during the loading time.

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                  • A acerunner316

                    this is what i have: pLoadingDlg->Create(IDD_LOADING,this); IDD_LOADING is configured as Style: child, Border: dialog frame, title bar, visible, tool window. Is this correct? The Loading dialog still doesn't show up. But the main window is disabled as expected. I can't click anything during the loading time.

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                    Mark Salsbery
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #15

                    acerunner316 wrote:

                    IDD_LOADING is configured as Style: child, Border: dialog frame, title bar, visible, tool window.

                    OK for reference, I tested with the same except no title bar and no toolwindow. What I'm wondering is in this line pLoadingDlg->Create(IDD_LOADING,this); What class "this" points to? Where are you calling this from and what class is the window derived from?

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                    • M Mark Salsbery

                      acerunner316 wrote:

                      IDD_LOADING is configured as Style: child, Border: dialog frame, title bar, visible, tool window.

                      OK for reference, I tested with the same except no title bar and no toolwindow. What I'm wondering is in this line pLoadingDlg->Create(IDD_LOADING,this); What class "this" points to? Where are you calling this from and what class is the window derived from?

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                      acerunner316
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #16

                      this is called in a function belonging to the main dialog's class.

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                      • A acerunner316

                        this is called in a function belonging to the main dialog's class.

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                        Mark Salsbery
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #17

                        acerunner316 wrote:

                        this is called in a function belonging to the main dialog's class.

                        and called from what function?

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                        • M Mark Salsbery

                          acerunner316 wrote:

                          this is called in a function belonging to the main dialog's class.

                          and called from what function?

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                          acerunner316
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #18

                          Called from yet another function belonging to the same class. I only have one class because everything have been in one dialog box until now.

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                          • A acerunner316

                            Called from yet another function belonging to the same class. I only have one class because everything have been in one dialog box until now.

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                            Mark Salsbery
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #19

                            acerunner316 wrote:

                            Called from yet another function belonging to the same class.

                            OK, my point is, as long as you're not creating it in the class' WM_CREATE handler or OnInitDialog() override it should show. Are you creating the dialog, doing the processing, and destroying the dialog all in one function? If so, then you could try this: ... pLoadingDlg->Create(IDD_LOADING,this); Invalidate(FALSE); UpdateWindow(); ....do processing ...destroy dialog as usual

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                            • M Mark Salsbery

                              acerunner316 wrote:

                              Called from yet another function belonging to the same class.

                              OK, my point is, as long as you're not creating it in the class' WM_CREATE handler or OnInitDialog() override it should show. Are you creating the dialog, doing the processing, and destroying the dialog all in one function? If so, then you could try this: ... pLoadingDlg->Create(IDD_LOADING,this); Invalidate(FALSE); UpdateWindow(); ....do processing ...destroy dialog as usual

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                              acerunner316
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #20

                              Yes i am creating, processing and destroying all in one function. But on different calls of the function. Therefore, the pointer to CLoading has to be static. I've tried your new node, it works! But the dialog box is created in the upper left corner of the main dialog box. How can I position it so that it pops up in the center like with the popup and overlap styles?

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                              • A acerunner316

                                hwndSaveFocus = GetFocus(); that gives me the error: error C2440: '=' : cannot convert from 'class CWnd *' to 'struct HWND__ *

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                                Scott Holt
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #21

                                OK, hang on, let me check the API documentaiton....be right back

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                                • A acerunner316

                                  hwndSaveFocus = GetFocus(); that gives me the error: error C2440: '=' : cannot convert from 'class CWnd *' to 'struct HWND__ *

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                                  Scott Holt
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #22

                                  OK, my bad...you're evidently using MFC, which provides its own "flavor" of 'GetFocus()'. Try the following: CWnd* pwndSaveFocus = GetFocus() ; ... SetFocus(pwndSaveFocus) ; The difference is that 'GetFocus()' and 'SetFocus()' from the MFC classes operate on an instance of the 'CWnd' class. The code I originally gave you is bare-bones Windows API, and operates on window handles (HWND). The 'CWnd' class in MFC actually encapsulates HWNDs. Alternatively, you could force the use of the Windows API functions by using the scoping operator to go "outside" the MFC scope to the global scope, as follows: HWND hwndSaveFocus = ::GetFocus() ; ... ::SetFocus(hwndSaveFocus) ; The '::' at the beginning of each of the above statements forces the compiler to bypass the MFC functions and map directly to the Windows API. Hope this gets you a little closer. Scott

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                                  • A acerunner316

                                    Yes i am creating, processing and destroying all in one function. But on different calls of the function. Therefore, the pointer to CLoading has to be static. I've tried your new node, it works! But the dialog box is created in the upper left corner of the main dialog box. How can I position it so that it pops up in the center like with the popup and overlap styles?

                                    M Offline
                                    M Offline
                                    Mark Salsbery
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #23

                                    acerunner316 wrote:

                                    How can I position it so that it pops up in the center like with the popup and overlap styles?

                                    Center of the main dialog? You could set the Center style to TRUE or move the dialog yourself:

                                    pLoadingDlg->Create(IDD_LOADING,this);
                                    CRect MainDialogRect, LoadDialogRect;
                                    GetClientRect(&MainDialogRect);
                                    pLoadingDlg->GetWindowRect(&LoadDialogRect);
                                    pLoadingDlg->MoveWindow((MainDialogRect.Width() - LoadDialogRect.Width()) / 2,
                                    (MainDialogRect.Height() - LoadDialogRect.Height()) / 2,
                                    LoadDialogRect.Width(), LoadDialogRect.Height());

                                    *EDIT* Fixed the MoveWindow call heh :laugh: -- modified at 21:55 Monday 27th November, 2006

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                                    • S Scott Holt

                                      OK, my bad...you're evidently using MFC, which provides its own "flavor" of 'GetFocus()'. Try the following: CWnd* pwndSaveFocus = GetFocus() ; ... SetFocus(pwndSaveFocus) ; The difference is that 'GetFocus()' and 'SetFocus()' from the MFC classes operate on an instance of the 'CWnd' class. The code I originally gave you is bare-bones Windows API, and operates on window handles (HWND). The 'CWnd' class in MFC actually encapsulates HWNDs. Alternatively, you could force the use of the Windows API functions by using the scoping operator to go "outside" the MFC scope to the global scope, as follows: HWND hwndSaveFocus = ::GetFocus() ; ... ::SetFocus(hwndSaveFocus) ; The '::' at the beginning of each of the above statements forces the compiler to bypass the MFC functions and map directly to the Windows API. Hope this gets you a little closer. Scott

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                                      acerunner316
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #24

                                      The MFC SetFocus apparently takes 0 parameters. Then I tried the global scope with the :: compiled, but still loses focus after destroying the "loading" dialog. Looks like Marks method is getting me closer. I just need to figure out how to center the child dialog. Thanks for your help.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • M Mark Salsbery

                                        acerunner316 wrote:

                                        How can I position it so that it pops up in the center like with the popup and overlap styles?

                                        Center of the main dialog? You could set the Center style to TRUE or move the dialog yourself:

                                        pLoadingDlg->Create(IDD_LOADING,this);
                                        CRect MainDialogRect, LoadDialogRect;
                                        GetClientRect(&MainDialogRect);
                                        pLoadingDlg->GetWindowRect(&LoadDialogRect);
                                        pLoadingDlg->MoveWindow((MainDialogRect.Width() - LoadDialogRect.Width()) / 2,
                                        (MainDialogRect.Height() - LoadDialogRect.Height()) / 2,
                                        LoadDialogRect.Width(), LoadDialogRect.Height());

                                        *EDIT* Fixed the MoveWindow call heh :laugh: -- modified at 21:55 Monday 27th November, 2006

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                                        acerunner316
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #25

                                        The center style seems to center the child dialog relative to the screen and not to the main window. The code you provided positioned the child dialog where I wanted, except for one problem. The controls in the main dialog appear to overlap the "loading" dialog. I know that controls are considered child windows as well. So how to I make the "loading" dialog on top of the other child dialogs?

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                                        • A acerunner316

                                          The center style seems to center the child dialog relative to the screen and not to the main window. The code you provided positioned the child dialog where I wanted, except for one problem. The controls in the main dialog appear to overlap the "loading" dialog. I know that controls are considered child windows as well. So how to I make the "loading" dialog on top of the other child dialogs?

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                                          Mark Salsbery
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #26

                                          Instead of MoveWindow... pLoadingDlg->SetWindowPos(wndTop, (MainDialogRect.Width() - LoadDialogRect.Width()) / 2, (MainDialogRect.Height() - LoadDialogRect.Height()) / 2, LoadDialogRect.Width(), LoadDialogRect.Height(), SWP_NOSIZE | SWP_SHOWWINDOW); Maybe? :)

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