WEKF_CustomKey (Industry 8.1)
12/2/2014
Review the syntax, members, and examples of the WEKF_CustomKey WMI provider class for Windows Embedded 8.1 Industry (Industry 8.1).
This WMI provider class blocks or unblocks custom-defined key combinations.
Syntax
class WEKF_CustomKey {
[Static] uint32 Add(
[In] string CustomKey
);
[Static] uint32 Remove(
[In] string CustomKey
);
[Key] string Id;
[Read, Write] boolean Enabled;
};
Members
The following tables list any methods and properties that belong to this class.
Methods
Methods |
Description |
---|---|
Creates a new custom key combination and enables Keyboard Filter to block the new key combination. |
|
Removes the specified custom key combination. Keyboard Filter stops blocking the key combination that was removed. |
Properties
Property |
Data type |
Qualifiers |
Description |
---|---|---|---|
Id |
string |
[key] |
The name of the custom key combination. |
Enabled |
Boolean |
[read, write] |
Indicates if the key is blocked or unblocked. This property can be one of the following values:
ValueDescription
trueIndicates that the key is blocked.
falseIndicates that the key is not blocked.
|
Remarks
You can specify key combinations by including the modifier keys in the name. The most common modifier names are “Ctrl”, “Shift”, “Alt”, and “Win”. You cannot block a combination of non-modifier keys. For example, you can block a key combination of “Ctrl+Shift+F”, but you cannot block a key combination of “A+D”.
When you block a shift-modified key, you must enter the key as “Shift” + the unmodified key. For example, to block the % key on an English keyboard layout, you must specify the key as “Shift+5”. Attempting to block “%”, results in Keyboard Filter blocking “5” instead.
When you specify the key combination to block, you must use the English names for the keys. For a list of the key names you can specify, see Keyboard Filter key names.
Example
The following code demonstrates how to add or enable a custom key combination that Keyboard Filter will block by using the Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI) providers for Keyboard Filter. This example modifies the properties directly and does not call any of the methods defined in WEKF_CustomKey.
<#
.Synopsis
This script shows how to use the WMI provider to enable and add
Keyboard Filter rules through Windows PowerShell on the local computer.
.Parameter ComputerName
Optional parameter to specify a remote machine that this script should
manage. If not specified, the script will execute all WMI operations
locally.
#>
param (
[String] $ComputerName
)
$CommonParams = @{"namespace"="root\standardcimv2\embedded"}
$CommonParams += $PSBoundParameters
function Enable-Custom-Key($Id) {
<#
.Synopsis
Toggle on a Custom Key Keyboard Filter Rule
.Description
Use Get-WMIObject to enumerate all WEKF_CustomKey instances,
filter against key value "Id", and set that instance's "Enabled"
property to 1/true.
In the case that the Custom instance does not exist, add a new
instance of WEKF_CustomKey using Set-WMIInstance.
.Example
Enable-Custom-Key "Ctrl+V"
Enable filtering of the Ctrl + V sequence.
#>
$custom = Get-WMIObject -class WEKF_CustomKey @CommonParams |
where {
$_.Id -eq "$Id"
};
if ($custom) {
# Rule exists. Just enable it.
$custom.Enabled = 1;
$custom.Put() | Out-Null;
"Enabled Custom Filter $Id.";
} else {
Set-WMIInstance `
-class WEKF_CustomKey `
-argument @{Id="$Id"} `
@CommonParams | Out-Null
"Added Custom Filter $Id.";
}
}
# Some example uses of the function defined above.
Enable-Custom-Key "Ctrl+V"
Enable-Custom-Key "Numpad0"
Enable-Custom-Key "Shift+Numpad1"
See Also
Reference
Keyboard Filter WMI provider reference