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Icon.FromHandle(IntPtr) Method

Definition

Creates a GDI+ Icon from the specified Windows handle to an icon (HICON).

public:
 static System::Drawing::Icon ^ FromHandle(IntPtr handle);
public static System.Drawing.Icon FromHandle (IntPtr handle);
static member FromHandle : nativeint -> System.Drawing.Icon
Public Shared Function FromHandle (handle As IntPtr) As Icon

Parameters

handle
IntPtr

nativeint

A Windows handle to an icon.

Returns

The Icon this method creates.

Examples

The following code example is designed for use with Windows Forms, and it requires PaintEventArgs e, which is a parameter of the Paint event handler. The code performs the following actions:

  • Creates a Bitmap.

  • Draws that object to the screen.

  • Gets an icon handle for the Bitmap.

  • Sets the Form.Icon attribute of the form to an icon created from the handle.

  • Calls the Windows API function DestroyIcon to release resources.

private:
   [System::Runtime::InteropServices::DllImportAttribute("user32.dll",CharSet=CharSet::Auto)]
   static bool DestroyIcon( IntPtr handle );

private:
   [SecurityPermission(SecurityAction::Demand, Flags=SecurityPermissionFlag::UnmanagedCode)]
   void GetHicon_Example( PaintEventArgs^ e )
   {
      
      // Create a Bitmap object from an image file.
      Bitmap^ myBitmap = gcnew Bitmap( "c:\\FakePhoto.jpg" );
      
      // Draw myBitmap to the screen.
      e->Graphics->DrawImage( myBitmap, 0, 0 );
      
      // Get an Hicon for myBitmap.
      IntPtr Hicon = myBitmap->GetHicon();
      
      // Create a new icon from the handle. 
      System::Drawing::Icon^ newIcon = ::Icon::FromHandle( Hicon );
      
      // Set the form Icon attribute to the new icon.
      this->Icon = newIcon;
      
      // You can now destroy the Icon, since the form creates
      // its own copy of the icon accesible through the Form.Icon property.
      DestroyIcon( newIcon->Handle );
   }

[System.Runtime.InteropServices.DllImport("user32.dll", CharSet = CharSet.Auto)]
extern static bool DestroyIcon(IntPtr handle);

private void GetHicon_Example(PaintEventArgs e)
{

    // Create a Bitmap object from an image file.
    Bitmap myBitmap = new Bitmap(@"c:\FakePhoto.jpg");

    // Draw myBitmap to the screen.
    e.Graphics.DrawImage(myBitmap, 0, 0);

    // Get an Hicon for myBitmap.
    IntPtr Hicon = myBitmap.GetHicon();

    // Create a new icon from the handle. 
    Icon newIcon = Icon.FromHandle(Hicon);

    // Set the form Icon attribute to the new icon.
    this.Icon = newIcon;

    // You can now destroy the icon, since the form creates
    // its own copy of the icon accessible through the Form.Icon property.
    DestroyIcon(newIcon.Handle);
}
<System.Runtime.InteropServices.DllImportAttribute("user32.dll")> _
    Private Shared Function DestroyIcon(ByVal handle _ 
    As IntPtr) As Boolean 
    End Function

   Private Sub GetHicon_Example(ByVal e As PaintEventArgs)

        ' Create a Bitmap object from an image file.
        Dim myBitmap As New Bitmap("c:\FakePhoto.jpg")

        ' Draw myBitmap to the screen.
        e.Graphics.DrawImage(myBitmap, 0, 0)

        ' Get an Hicon for myBitmap.
        Dim HIcon As IntPtr = myBitmap.GetHicon()
    
        ' Create a new icon from the handle.
        Dim newIcon As Icon = System.Drawing.Icon.FromHandle(HIcon)

        ' Set the form Icon attribute to the new icon.
        Me.Icon = newIcon

        ' You can now destroy the icon, since the form creates its 
        ' own copy of the icon accessible through the Form.Icon property.
    DestroyIcon(newIcon.Handle)
    End Sub

Remarks

When using this method, you must dispose of the original icon by using the DestroyIcon method in the Windows API to ensure that the resources are released.

Applies to