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116

answers:

4

Hi,

I was wondering if there is anyway to lock and unlock the clipboard from c#. Basically, I'd be writing something into it and I do not want anyone else to write to it before i pick up my stuff.

Any help would be appreciated.

Thanks

A: 

Nope, the clipboard doesn't work that way. What if the user wanted to copy something in another app, but couldn't because yours had locked it somehow?

If you're trying to have two processes communicate, look into alternatives designed for inter-process communication, like remoting, named pipes, sockets or shared memory. Remoting is probably the first place to look for applications written in C#.

shambulator
+2  A: 

The OpenClipboard() API function, followed by EmptyClipboard() locks the clipboard until CloseClipboard is called. You should probably pass a window handle of a window in the target process. No idea if this will actually work. Visit pinvoke.net for the required declarations.

Hans Passant
This would technically work, but as everyone here realizes, it would cause terrible problems for all other apps.
Chris Thornton
Hmm, he's trying to speed up his program. A second or so while his program has the focus is not a terrible problem.
Hans Passant
+1  A: 

As @shambulator says, this isn't what the clipboard is designed to do. Perhaps you should try a different tack. Integration with legacy systems can be tackled inmany ways (most of them bad, alas!).

The system to which you only can send keystrokes: is it a Windows application? Can you dig into its window structure to explicitly set texts inside text boxes by their HWNDs? Does the system have any kind of file I/O you could use? Perhaps you could dig into its database?

Pontus Gagge
+1  A: 

Do NOT do this. The clipboard is there for the convenience of the USER, not the PROGRAMMER! You will cause errors and crashes in other programs that are trying to (properly) use the clipboard, including programs that are monitoring for updates.

“Programs should not transfer data into our out of the clipboard without an explicit instruction from the user.”
— Charles Petzold, Programming Windows 3.1, Microsoft Press, 1992

Chris Thornton