Make WPF Window Ignore Show Desktop (Win+D) - c#

So there are various questions on this topic already (from 4-5 years ago) and I have followed them to come up with the following solution to avoid my window reacting to Win+D (Show Desktop) Command:
public partial class MainWindow : Window
{
[DllImport("user32.dll", SetLastError = true)]
static extern IntPtr FindWindowEx(IntPtr hP, IntPtr hC, string sC, string sW);
[System.Runtime.InteropServices.DllImport("user32.dll", SetLastError = true)]
static extern IntPtr SetParent(IntPtr hWndChild, IntPtr hWndNewParent);
public MainWindow()
{
InitializeComponent();
Loaded += OnWindowLoaded;
}
private void OnWindowLoaded(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
IntPtr nWinHandle = FindWindowEx(IntPtr.Zero, IntPtr.Zero, "Progman", null);
nWinHandle = FindWindowEx(nWinHandle, IntPtr.Zero, "SHELLDLL_DefView", null);
SetParent(new WindowInteropHelper(this).Handle, nWinHandle);
}
}
However this does not seem to work for me (the above code is in a brand new project).
Can anyone explain if there has been any change to the WinAPI, should this still work? This is the answer I come across on almost every question I find on this topic.
I am running:
Edition: Windows 10 Pro
Version: 21H2
Build: 19044.1645
Experience: Windows Feature Experience Pack 120.2212.4170.0,

Ok so I found the solution that works for me, I know setting the window as a child of the desktop has its problems/risks, but for people that still need to do it, here is what I found:
The "SHELLDLL_DefView" desktop window is not always a child of "Progman", sometimes it is a child of a "WorkerW" window instead. This is why the code in my original question didn't work for me.
So rather than finding the "Progman" window and finding the "SHELLDLL_DefView" child, you instead need to enumerate through all windows and find the window which has "SHELLDLL_DefView" as a child.
This is done with the EnumWindows function (https://www.pinvoke.net/default.aspx/user32.enumwindows)
The below code is a mashup of the one of the examples from the pinvoke.net link above and the following 2 answers:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/60856252/9420881
https://stackoverflow.com/a/66832500/9420881
[DllImport("user32.dll", SetLastError = true)]
public static extern IntPtr FindWindowEx(IntPtr hP, IntPtr hC, string sC,
string sW);
[DllImport("user32.dll", CharSet = CharSet.Auto, SetLastError = true)]
[return: MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.Bool)]
public static extern bool EnumWindows(EnumedWindow lpEnumFunc, ArrayList
lParam);
public delegate bool EnumedWindow(IntPtr handleWindow, ArrayList handles);
public static bool GetWindowHandle(IntPtr windowHandle, ArrayList
windowHandles)
{
windowHandles.Add(windowHandle);
return true;
}
private void SetAsDesktopChild()
{
ArrayList windowHandles = new ArrayList();
EnumedWindow callBackPtr = GetWindowHandle;
EnumWindows(callBackPtr, windowHandles);
foreach (IntPtr windowHandle in windowHandles)
{
IntPtr hNextWin = FindWindowEx(windowHandle, IntPtr.Zero,
"SHELLDLL_DefView", null);
if (hNextWin != IntPtr.Zero)
{
var interop = new WindowInteropHelper(_window);
interop.EnsureHandle();
interop.Owner = hNextWin;
}
}
}
Now my WPF stays on the desktop after Show Desktop/Win+D as intended.

There are some Windows operations that cannot be overridden by the developer, such as:
Always showing your tray icon on the main taskbar
Overriding the Win+D to always show your window on the desktop
Forcing notifications to always be shown
These are policies of the Windows operating system to ensure the user is always in control, and not the developer.
Having said that, you can try another approach to making your "widget" visible. Might I suggest the following:
Create a 1 second System.Threading.Timer
In the timer's callback, check to see if there are any visible desktop windows. When there are none (i.e. due to Win+D or the user just closing/minimizing every window), make your widget window visible.
A 1-second delay to show your widget is a small cost to your UX, in my opinion.

Related

Start menu will cover the Window when not open in Visual Studio

I have create a Window use WPF, I want to my Window always display on the top, So I just create a thread for it:
System.Threading.Tasks.Task.Factory.StartNew(() =>
{
for (;;)
{
System.Threading.Thread.Sleep(3000);
this.Dispatcher.BeginInvoke(new Action(() =>
{
this.Activate();
this.Topmost = true;
}));
}
});
}
This will make sure my window go to front in every 3 seconds.
And when I open it under Visual Studio 2015, all fine, even when I open the Start Menu, it will close start menu and bring the window on top.But when I'm not use Visual studio open the application(just double click open the application), when I open start menu, the Window just flickering, not display on the top. What I miss? and how do I let it work as like open the application under Visual Studio 2015(I'm tested on Win10)?
EDIT: I somehow missed the point covered in the title. The point I make later of "Do not do it" still holds true though. It could cause problems for users of your application.
If you really need to though, this answer may be the one you are looking for. It discusses how to keep a window in front of everything. It is still a work around (just like most answers to your question).
Old Answer
I understand your problem as: you want your window to stay on top of all other windows. Similar functionality can be found in Ubuntu and The Google Play Music desktop application for Window's (see below).
To accomplish this, all you need to do is add Topmost="True" to your Window as demonstrated below (look at the last property).
<Window xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"
xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml"
xmlns:d="http://schemas.microsoft.com/expression/blend/2008"
xmlns:mc="http://schemas.openxmlformats.org/markup-compatibility/2006"
Topmost="True">
</Window>
Unless your actual problem "is what happens when two windows have that property set?" Then I would suggest reading this article (the same article that was referenced in the comments). It states the following:
"How do I create a window that is never covered by any other windows, not even other topmost windows?"
Imagine if this were possible and imagine if two programs did this.
Program A creates a window that is "super-topmost" and so does Program
B. Now the user drags the two windows so that they overlap. What
happens? You've created yourself a logical impossibility. One of those
two windows must be above the other, contradicting the imaginary
"super-topmost" feature.
If that functionality is really what you are after, I would suggest: do not do it. All other solutions are a workaround and could cause problems for consumers of your application.
I would have used interop to do this.
public class Interop
{
[DllImport("user32.dll")]
public static extern bool SetForegroundWindow(IntPtr hWnd);
[DllImport("user32.dll")]
public static extern bool ShowWindow(IntPtr hwind, int cmd);
[DllImport("user32.dll")]
public static extern IntPtr GetForegroundWindow();
public static IntPtr GetWindowHandle(Window window)
{
return new WindowInteropHelper(window).Handle;
}
}
then use a timer:
private void Tick(object state)
{
this.Dispatcher.Invoke(() =>
{
IntPtr window = Interop.GetWindowHandle(this);
IntPtr focused = Interop.GetForegroundWindow();
if (window != focused)
{
Interop.SetForegroundWindow(window);
// Command 5 for show
Interop.ShowWindow(window, 5);
}
});
}
Code from
And for the part of your problem regarding the startmenu, just add a group policy.
Or you can make a interop to ´FindWindowEx´ to find the startbutton and disable it.
I agree with Jonas's answer but would modify it to use an event instead of a timer.
/// Get the topmost window handle
[System.Runtime.InteropServices.DllImport("user32.dll")]
private static extern IntPtr GetForegroundWindow();
/// Trigger event when topmost window changed
[System.Runtime.InteropServices.DllImport("user32.dll")]
private static extern IntPtr SetWinEventHook(uint eventMin, uint eventMax, IntPtr hmodWinEventProc, TopmostWindowChangedDelegate lpfnWinEventProc, uint idProcess, uint idThread, uint dwFlags);
/// Set the topmost window
[DllImport("user32.dll")]
private static extern bool SetForegroundWindow(IntPtr hWnd);
/// Show a window
[DllImport("user32.dll")]
private static extern bool ShowWindow(IntPtr hwind, int cmd);
// Constant variables for topmost window changed event
private const uint WINEVENT_OUTOFCONTEXT = 0;
private const uint EVENT_SYSTEM_FOREGROUND = 3;
/// Keep track of the last topmost window with a name
private static IntPtr topWinHandle { get; set; }
/// Implementation of topmost window changed delegate
private TopmostWindowChangedDelegate TopmostWindowChanged { get; set; }
Then set up the handlers in one of your startup methods
// Set topmost window changed event handler
TopmostWindowChanged = new TopmostWindowChangedDelegate(WinEventProc);
// Set event hook for topmost window changed
IntPtr hook = SetWinEventHook(EVENT_SYSTEM_FOREGROUND, EVENT_SYSTEM_FOREGROUND, IntPtr.Zero, TopmostWindowChanged, 0, 0, WINEVENT_OUTOFCONTEXT);
And then move your window to topmost when the other topmost changes
/// Make sure this window stays on top
public void WinEventProc(IntPtr hWinEventHook, uint eventType, IntPtr hwnd, int idObject, int idChild, uint dwEventThread, uint dwmsEventTime)
{
// Get current window name from handle
IntPtr handle = GetForegroundWindow();
if(handle != YOUR_WINDOW'S_HANDLE)
{
// Move your window back to the top
SetForegroundWindow(YOUR_WINDOW'S_HANDLE);
ShowWindow(YOUR_WINDOW'S_HANDLE, 5);
}
}

C# SendKeys to foreground window in Windows 7 not working

I'm trying to build a global hotkey application with C# in Visual Studio 2012 to run on Windows 7. I have everything working except the SendKeys are never showing in the application.
Here is the code I am using to send the keystrokes:
Updated to debug with GetFocusedWindow example.
StringBuilder className = new StringBuilder(256);
IntPtr hWnd = GetForegroundWindow();
GetClassName(hWnd, className, className.Capacity);
Debug.WriteLine("Foreground window: {0}={1}", hWnd.ToInt32().ToString("X"), className);
hWnd = GetFocusedWindow();
GetClassName(hWnd, className, className.Capacity);
Debug.WriteLine("Focused window: {0}={1}", hWnd.ToInt32().ToString("X"), className);
SendKeys.Send("Hello World");
When I debug the program, focus Notepad, and hit the hotkey I get the following debug message and the keystrokes are never inserted into Notepad:
Foreground Window: 4F02B6=Notepad
Focused Window: 1B6026A=WindowsForms10.Window.8.app.0.bf7d44_r11_ad1
How can I send keystrokes to the current foreground window?
Foreground windows doesn't necessary mean focused window. A child window of the top-level foreground window may have the focus, while you're sending keys to its parent.
Retrieving the focused child window from another process is a bit tricky. Try the following implementation of GetFocusedWindow, use it instead of GetForegroundWindow (untested):
static IntPtr GetFocusedWindow()
{
uint currentThread = GetCurrentThreadId();
IntPtr activeWindow = GetForegroundWindow();
uint activeProcess;
uint activeThread = GetWindowThreadProcessId(activeWindow, out activeProcess);
if (currentThread != activeThread)
AttachThreadInput(currentThread, activeThread, true);
try
{
return GetFocus();
}
finally
{
if (currentThread != activeThread)
AttachThreadInput(currentThread, activeThread, false);
}
}
[DllImport("kernel32.dll")]
static extern uint GetCurrentThreadId();
[DllImport("user32.dll")]
private static extern IntPtr GetForegroundWindow();
[DllImport("user32.dll")]
static extern IntPtr GetFocus();
[DllImport("user32.dll", SetLastError = true)]
static extern bool AttachThreadInput(uint idAttach, uint idAttachTo, bool fAttach);
[DllImport("user32.dll")]
static extern uint GetWindowThreadProcessId(IntPtr hWnd, out uint lpdwProcessId);
Updated to address the comment:
When I use this function it sets the focus to my application window.
It's hard to tell what's wrong on your side, the following works for me when the focus is inside Notepad:
private async void Form1_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
var className = new StringBuilder(200);
while (true)
{
await Task.Delay(500);
IntPtr focused = GetFocusedWindow();
GetClassName(focused, className, className.Capacity);
var classNameStr = className.ToString();
this.Text = classNameStr;
if (classNameStr == "Edit")
SendKeys.Send("Hello!");
}
}

Is there a way to have my app push its icon to other apps?

I have a WPF app that starts another application, I'd like for my application to change the Icon of this second app. I am able to use GetWindowText and SetWindowText to change the title. Is it possible to do this for the Icon as well?
update
I have no control of the second app.
To change the window title of another application:
Definitions of Win32 API functions and constants:
[DllImport("user32.dll", SetLastError = true, CharSet = CharSet.Auto)]
public static extern bool SetWindowText(IntPtr hwnd, String lpString);
[DllImport("user32.dll")]
public static extern int SendMessage(IntPtr hwnd, int message, int wParam, IntPtr lParam);
private const int WM_SETICON = 0x80;
private const int ICON_SMALL = 0;
private const int ICON_BIG = 1;
Usage:
Process process = Process.Start("notepad");
// If you have just started a process and want to use its main window handle,
// consider using the WaitForInputIdle method to allow the process to finish starting,
// ensuring that the main window handle has been created.
// Otherwise, an exception will be thrown.
process.WaitForInputIdle();
SetWindowText(process.MainWindowHandle, "Hello!");
Icon icon = new Icon(#"C:\Icon\File\Path.ico");
SendMessage(process.MainWindowHandle, WM_SETICON, ICON_BIG, icon.Handle);
In Windows Forms you would use
Icon ico = Icon.ExtractAssociatedIcon(#"C:\WINDOWS\system32\notepad.exe");
this.Icon = ico;
So im guessing for WPF it would be similar.

How do you get a child window using its control ID?

I am new to WINAPI and have figured out how to send a message to another program. The program I am using however I would like to be able to have it click on a specific button. From what I have learned by viewing Spy++ windows handles change for the programs every time they are reloaded and so do the handles for their controls. The control ID stays the same. After two days of trying to figure it out I am here.
under SendMesssageA if I specify the current handle as viewable by Spy++ and use that and run the code it works fine and clicks the button on my external application. I am attempting to use GetDlgItem as I have read that I can get the handle for the control (child window) using it. I am doing something wrong however since no matter what I do it returns 0 or 'null'.
How can I get GetDlgItem to return the child control handle so that I may use it to sendmessage to click that control in the external application?
Thanks for your help an input ahead of time.
[DllImport("User32.dll")]
static extern bool SetForegroundWindow(IntPtr hWnd);
Process[] myProcess = Process.GetProcessesByName("program name here");
[DllImport("user32.dll", CharSet = CharSet.Auto)]
static extern int SendMessageA(IntPtr hwnd, int wMsg, int wParam, uint lParam);
[DllImport("user32.dll", CharSet = CharSet.Auto)]
public static extern IntPtr GetDlgItem(int hwnd, int childID);
public const int WM_LBUTTONDOWN = 0x0201;
public const int WM_LBUTTONUP = 0x0202;
public void SendClick()
{
IntPtr hwnd = myProcess[0].MainWindowHandle;
SetForegroundWindow(hwnd);
int intCID = 1389;
IntPtr ptrTest = GetDlgItem(hwnd, intCID);
SendKeys.SendWait(" ");
Thread.Sleep(1000);
SendKeys.SendWait("various text to be sent here");
Thread.Sleep(1000);
SendKeys.SendWait("{ENTER}");
Thread.Sleep(1000);
SendMessageA(ptrTest, WM_LBUTTONDOWN, WM_LBUTTONDOWN, 0);
}
I think you have to use the Win32 API to find the "receiving" application window, and then find a child window of that handle.
This is something I found googling Win32 API FindWindow
http://www.c-sharpcorner.com/UploadFile/shrijeetnair/win32api12062005005528AM/win32api.aspx

Embedding a File Explorer instance in a Windows Forms application form

My (C#, .NET 3.5) application generates files and, in addition to raising events that can be caught and reacted to, I want to display the target folder to the user in a form. The file-list is being shown within the same form as other information.
I'm using an instance of the WebBrowser control (System.Windows.Forms.WebBrowser), then navigating to the folder. This shows some default view of the explorer window, with the file summary panel on the left and the files in the 'Tiles' (large icon and text) view.
For example,
wb.Navigate(#"c:\path\to\folder\");
I'd like to suppress the panel and to view the file list in the Details view. The user can get to this via a right-click, context menu, but I'd like it to come up automatically.
I'd rather not have to build my own TreeView, DataGridView or whatever; the WebBrowser control does all the updating and re-sorting and whatnot 'for free'.
Is there a better way? A different control to use or some additional arguments to pass to the control?
And if I could trap events (for example, files being selected/renamed/double-clicked, etc.) then all the better!
WARNING: Long post with lots of code.
When you navigate the web browser control to a file system folder the web browser control hosts a shell view window that in turn hosts the explorer list view. In fact this is exactly the same thing that the Explorer process does as well as the file dialogs and Internet Explorer. This shell window is not a control so there are no methods that can be called on it or events that can be subscribed to but it can receive windows messages and it can be sub-classed.
It turns out that the part of your question dealing with setting the view to Details automatically is actually quite easy. In your web browser control's Navigated event simply find the handle to the shell view window and send it a WM_COMMAND message with a particular shell constant (SHVIEW_REPORT). This is an undocumented command but it is supported on all Windows platforms up to and including Windows 2008 and almost certainly will be on Windows 7. Some code to add to your web browser's form demonstrates this:
private delegate int EnumChildProc(IntPtr hwnd, IntPtr lParam);
[DllImport("user32.dll", SetLastError = true)]
private static extern IntPtr SendMessage(IntPtr hWnd, int Msg,
IntPtr wParam, IntPtr lParam);
[DllImport("user32.dll", SetLastError = true)]
private static extern int EnumChildWindows(IntPtr hWndParent,
EnumChildProc lpEnumFunc, IntPtr lParam);
[DllImport("user32.dll", SetLastError = true, CharSet = CharSet.Unicode)]
private static extern int GetClassName(IntPtr hWnd, StringBuilder lpClassName,
int nMaxCount);
private const int WM_COMMAND = 0x0111;
private const int SHVIEW_REPORT = 0x702C;
private const string SHELLVIEW_CLASS = "SHELLDLL_DefView";
private IntPtr m_ShellView;
void webBrowser1_Navigated(object sender, WebBrowserNavigatedEventArgs e)
{
m_ShellView = IntPtr.Zero;
EnumChildWindows(webBrowser1.Handle, EnumChildren, IntPtr.Zero);
if (m_ShellView != IntPtr.Zero)
{
SendMessage(m_ShellView, WM_COMMAND, (IntPtr)SHVIEW_REPORT, (IntPtr)0);
}
}
private int EnumChildren(IntPtr hwnd, IntPtr lParam)
{
int retval = 1;
StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(SHELLVIEW_CLASS.Length + 1);
int numChars = GetClassName(hwnd, sb, sb.Capacity);
if (numChars == SHELLVIEW_CLASS.Length)
{
if (sb.ToString(0, numChars) == SHELLVIEW_CLASS)
{
m_ShellView = hwnd;
retval = 0;
}
}
return retval;
}
Every time the web browser navigates to a new window (including when a folder is opened from within the explorer view) a new shell view window is created so the message must be re-sent to the new window in every Navigated event.
For the second part of your question you would like to receive events from the explorer list view. This is quite a bit more difficult than the first part. To do this you would need to sub-class the list view window and then monitor the windows messages for ones that interest you (such as WM_LBUTTONDBLCLK). In order to sub-class a window you would need to create your own class derived from the NativeWindow class and assign it the handle of the window that you need to monitor. You can then override its Window procedure and handle the various messages as you wish. Below is an example of creating a double click event - it is relatively simple but to get extensive access to the explorer list view may involve a lot more work than you are willing to do.
Add this to your form:
private ExplorerListView m_Explorer;
void OnExplorerItemExecuted(object sender, ExecuteEventArgs e)
{
string msg = string.Format("Item to be executed: {0}{0}{1}",
Environment.NewLine, e.SelectedItem);
e.Cancel = (MessageBox.Show(msg, "", MessageBoxButtons.OKCancel)
== DialogResult.Cancel);
}
and these two lines to the Navigated event handler (right after the SendMessage):
m_Explorer = new ExplorerListView(m_ShellView);
m_Explorer.ItemExecuted += OnExplorerItemExecuted;
Then add the following classes:
class ExplorerListView : NativeWindow
{
public event EventHandler<ExecuteEventArgs> ItemExecuted;
[DllImport("user32.dll", SetLastError = true, CharSet = CharSet.Unicode)]
private static extern IntPtr SendMessage(IntPtr hWnd, int Msg,
IntPtr wParam, IntPtr lParam);
[DllImport("user32.dll", SetLastError = true, CharSet = CharSet.Unicode)]
private static extern IntPtr FindWindowEx(IntPtr hwndParent,
IntPtr hwndChildAfter, string lpszClass, string lpszWindow);
private const int WM_LBUTTONDBLCLK = 0x0203;
private const int LVM_GETNEXTITEM = 0x100C;
private const int LVM_GETITEMTEXT = 0x1073;
private const int LVNI_SELECTED = 0x0002;
private const string EXPLORER_LISTVIEW_CLASS = "SysListView32";
public ExplorerListView(IntPtr shellViewHandle)
{
base.AssignHandle(FindWindowEx(shellViewHandle, IntPtr.Zero,
EXPLORER_LISTVIEW_CLASS, null));
if (base.Handle == IntPtr.Zero)
{
throw new ArgumentException("Window supplied does not encapsulate an explorer window.");
}
}
protected override void WndProc(ref Message m)
{
switch (m.Msg)
{
case WM_LBUTTONDBLCLK:
if (OnItemExecution() != 0) return;
break;
default:
break;
}
base.WndProc(ref m);
}
private int OnItemExecution()
{
int cancel = 0;
ExecuteEventArgs args = new ExecuteEventArgs(GetSelectedItem());
EventHandler<ExecuteEventArgs> temp = ItemExecuted;
if (temp != null)
{
temp(this, args);
if (args.Cancel) cancel = 1;
}
return cancel;
}
private string GetSelectedItem()
{
string item = null;
IntPtr pStringBuffer = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(2048);
IntPtr pItemBuffer = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(Marshal.SizeOf(typeof(LVITEM)));
int selectedItemIndex = SendMessage(base.Handle, LVM_GETNEXTITEM, (IntPtr)(-1), (IntPtr)LVNI_SELECTED).ToInt32();
if (selectedItemIndex > -1)
{
LVITEM lvi = new LVITEM();
lvi.cchTextMax = 1024;
lvi.pszText = pStringBuffer;
Marshal.StructureToPtr(lvi, pItemBuffer, false);
int numChars = SendMessage(base.Handle, LVM_GETITEMTEXT, (IntPtr)selectedItemIndex, pItemBuffer).ToInt32();
if (numChars > 0)
{
item = Marshal.PtrToStringUni(lvi.pszText, numChars);
}
}
Marshal.FreeHGlobal(pStringBuffer);
Marshal.FreeHGlobal(pItemBuffer);
return item;
}
struct LVITEM
{
public int mask;
public int iItem;
public int iSubItem;
public int state;
public int stateMask;
public IntPtr pszText;
public int cchTextMax;
public int iImage;
public IntPtr lParam;
public int iIndent;
public int iGroupId;
int cColumns; // tile view columns
public IntPtr puColumns;
public IntPtr piColFmt;
public int iGroup;
}
}
public class ExecuteEventArgs : EventArgs
{
public string SelectedItem { get; private set; }
public bool Cancel { get; set; }
internal ExecuteEventArgs(string selectedItem)
{
SelectedItem = selectedItem;
}
}
This should give you an idea of what you would need to do. If you want more than fairly simple events you may want to look for a alternative control, though from what I have seen in the free and low cost areas there are some pretty decent controls but they all have some quirks and will not give a seamless explorer experience.
Remember this code was put together fairly quickly without error handling or comments and ignoring several issues such as multiple selected items, so use it as a guideline and at your own risk.
In order to handle renaming, deleting and make other customization you need to write your own file explorer. WebBrowser control is not suitable for your needs. It's just a wrapper over ActiveX component.
You should check this codeproject article. It contains an implementation of file explorer. There are few more samples of file browser:
one
two
LogicNP Software has two controls (FileView and ShComboBox) that do what your looking for:
http://www.ssware.com/fldrview.htm
You can download a trial from their page, however it's ~130$ for the license.
I have written a library that might be able to help you. You can find it at: http://gong-shell.sourceforge.net/
The control you're looking for is the ShellView. There's tutorials there on how to create a simple Windows Explorer clone in only a few lines too.
Note for .NET 4.0 users: Gong-shell is currently broken for 4.0. The framework introduced changes in Interop and it will build just fine but cause different issues when interfacing with shell32 (notably the shellicon api, leading to an unmanaged null pointer dereference).
Check out this article here, it shows how to do this in .NET and WinForms. Doing it this way gives full-control over what the user sees.
I've used it in one of my applications and it works really well. You can show icon/details/list view and it stops the user moving to other directories (which is often the problem of showing the standard file/directory dialogs.
I use it to show the screen like the one below below http://img7.imageshack.us/img7/7647/screenshotbaf.png:
You may want to look at the ExplorerBrowser object.
See http://blogs.msdn.com/ieinternals/archive/2009/12/30/Windows-7-Web-Browser-Control-will-not-browse-file-system.aspx for more details.
If you are happy being Windows Vista only and wrapping a COM control, IExplorerBrowser might be acceptable for you needs.
This The Code Project article shows its use within an MFC program but at least one other person seems to have got it to work in C# after some effort.
The newer API exposes considerably more programmability than simply intercepting messages, but it is (obviously) useless for older platforms.
If you want to open a different window to display the target folder's content you can use System.Windows.Forms.OpenFileDialog, or SaveFileDialog, or inherit from FileDialog and extend it.
To allow the user to select a folder you can use FolderBrowserDialog, though as a user I don't like that control.
Does this help or you absolutely have to embed a control in your form?
Asaf

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