Anteckning
Åtkomst till den här sidan kräver auktorisering. Du kan prova att logga in eller ändra kataloger.
Åtkomst till den här sidan kräver auktorisering. Du kan prova att ändra kataloger.
The WM_UNICHAR message can be used by an application to post input to other windows. This message contains the character code of the key that was pressed. (Test whether a target app can process WM_UNICHAR messages by sending the message with wParam set to UNICODE_NOCHAR.)
#define WM_UNICHAR 0x0109
Parameters
-
wParam
-
The character code of the key.
If wParam is UNICODE_NOCHAR and the application processes this message, then return TRUE. The DefWindowProc function will return FALSE (the default).
If wParam is not UNICODE_NOCHAR, return FALSE. The Unicode DefWindowProc posts a WM_CHAR message with the same parameters and the ANSI DefWindowProc function posts either one or two WM_CHAR messages with the corresponding ANSI character(s).
-
lParam
-
The repeat count, scan code, extended-key flag, context code, previous key-state flag, and transition-state flag, as shown in the following table.
Bits Meaning 0-15 The repeat count for the current message. The value is the number of times the keystroke is autorepeated as a result of the user holding down the key. If the keystroke is held long enough, multiple messages are sent. However, the repeat count is not cumulative. 16-23 The scan code. The value depends on the OEM. 24 Indicates whether the key is an extended key, such as the right-hand ALT and CTRL keys that appear on an enhanced 101- or 102-key keyboard. The value is 1 if it is an extended key; otherwise, it is 0. 25-28 Reserved; do not use. 29 The context code. The value is 1 if the ALT key is held down while the key is pressed; otherwise, the value is 0. 30 The previous key state. The value is 1 if the key is down before the message is sent, or it is 0 if the key is up. 31 The transition state. The value is 1 if the key is being released, or it is 0 if the key is being pressed. For more detail, see Keystroke Message Flags.
Return value
An application should return zero if it processes this message.
Remarks
The WM_UNICHAR message is similar to WM_CHAR, but it uses Unicode Transformation Format (UTF)-32, whereas WM_CHAR uses UTF-16.
This message is designed to send or post Unicode characters to ANSI windows and can handle Unicode Supplementary Plane characters.
Because there is not necessarily a one-to-one correspondence between keys pressed and character messages generated, the information in the high-order word of the lParam parameter is generally not useful to applications. The information in the high-order word applies only to the most recent WM_KEYDOWN message that precedes the posting of the WM_UNICHAR message.
For enhanced 101- and 102-key keyboards, extended keys are the right ALT and the right CTRL keys on the main section of the keyboard; the INS, DEL, HOME, END, PAGE UP, PAGE DOWN and arrow keys in the clusters to the left of the numeric keypad; and the divide (/) and ENTER keys in the numeric keypad. Some other keyboards may support the extended-key bit in the lParam parameter.
Requirements
| Requirement | Value |
|---|---|
| Minimum supported client |
Windows XP [desktop apps only] |
| Minimum supported server |
Windows Server 2003 [desktop apps only] |
| Header |
|