tags:

views:

1028

answers:

2

This is a follow up question to this question

The solution to the above uses DWM to display a thumbnail of an active window. If I understand correctly, it works by letting you specify the window handle of the application you want to view and then having you provide a window handle and a location on that window where windows should draw the contents of the target Window.

Is there a way to render the window screen shot directly to BitmapImage or Image instead of directly drawing it somewhere in your window? (Basically to just grab a screen shot of the window - even if it's covered by another window - with out using an updating thumbnail.)

Thanks for you help!

A: 

Use Control.DrawToBitmap Method

Image img = myForm.DrawToBitmap();
Image img = myPanel.DrawToBitmap();
serhio
Thanks for your reply. Wouldn't this would require the screen shot to be drawn on the screen first and then saved? Is there a way to capture the screen shot of a window directly to an object (like Image) without having to draw it on the screen first?
Evan
DrawToBitmap obtains an Bitmap like you do when pressing the PrintScreen Button (on the form or for panel only). I am not sure if the form or panel should or not be really displayed on the screen, with visible panels is surely works, I believe with the hidden should work too.Bitmap bm = new Bitmap(wid, hgt);' draw the current form to the bitmapthis.DrawToBitmap(bm, new Rectangle(0, 0, wid, hgt))
serhio
+2  A: 

The Control.DrawToBitmap doesn't always work so I resorted to the following native API calls that provide more consistent results:

The Utilities class. Call Utilities.CaptureWindow(Control.Handle) to capture a specific control:

public static class Utilities
{
    public static Image CaptureScreen()
    {
        return CaptureWindow(User32.GetDesktopWindow());
    }

    public static Image CaptureWindow(IntPtr handle)
    {

        IntPtr hdcSrc = User32.GetWindowDC(handle);

        RECT windowRect = new RECT();
        User32.GetWindowRect(handle, ref windowRect);

        int width = windowRect.right - windowRect.left;
        int height = windowRect.bottom - windowRect.top;

        IntPtr hdcDest = Gdi32.CreateCompatibleDC(hdcSrc);
        IntPtr hBitmap = Gdi32.CreateCompatibleBitmap(hdcSrc, width, height);

        IntPtr hOld = Gdi32.SelectObject(hdcDest, hBitmap);
        Gdi32.BitBlt(hdcDest, 0, 0, width, height, hdcSrc, 0, 0, ApiConstants.SRCCOPY);
        Gdi32.SelectObject(hdcDest, hOld);
        Gdi32.DeleteDC(hdcDest);
        User32.ReleaseDC(handle, hdcSrc);

        Image image = Image.FromHbitmap(hBitmap);
        Gdi32.DeleteObject(hBitmap);

        return image;
    }
}

The Gdi32 class:

public class Gdi32
{
    [DllImport("gdi32.dll")]
    public static extern bool BitBlt(IntPtr hObject, int nXDest, int nYDest, int nWidth, int nHeight, IntPtr hObjectSource, int nXSrc, int nYSrc, int dwRop);
    [DllImport("gdi32.dll")]
    public static extern IntPtr CreateCompatibleBitmap(IntPtr hDC, int nWidth, int nHeight);
    [DllImport("gdi32.dll")]
    public static extern IntPtr CreateCompatibleDC(IntPtr hDC);
    [DllImport("gdi32.dll")]
    public static extern bool DeleteDC(IntPtr hDC);
    [DllImport("gdi32.dll")]
    public static extern bool DeleteObject(IntPtr hObject);
    [DllImport("gdi32.dll")]
    public static extern IntPtr SelectObject(IntPtr hDC, IntPtr hObject);
}

The User32 class:

public static class User32
{
    [DllImport("user32.dll")]
    public static extern IntPtr GetDesktopWindow();
    [DllImport("user32.dll")]
    public static extern IntPtr GetWindowDC(IntPtr hWnd);
    [DllImport("user32.dll")]
    public static extern IntPtr GetWindowRect(IntPtr hWnd, ref RECT rect);
    [DllImport("user32.dll")]
    public static extern IntPtr ReleaseDC(IntPtr hWnd, IntPtr hDC);
}

The constants used:

    public const int SRCCOPY = 13369376;

The structs used:

[StructLayout(LayoutKind.Sequential)]
public struct RECT
{
    public int left;
    public int top;
    public int right;
    public int bottom;
}

A friendly Control extension method:

public static class ControlExtensions
{
    public static Image DrawToImage(this Control control)
    {
        return Utilities.CaptureWindow(control.Handle);
    }
}
Cory Charlton
This was useful, but I've posted a followup question here: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2322217/getting-window-screenshots-but-text-portions-are-transparent
Josh Santangelo