MFC ActiveX Controls: Adding Custom Events
Custom events differ from stock events in that they are not automatically fired by class COleControl. A custom event recognizes a certain action, determined by the control developer, as an event. The event map entries for custom events are represented by the EVENT_CUSTOM macro. The following section implements a custom event for an ActiveX control project that was created using the ActiveX Control Wizard.
Adding a Custom Event with the Add Event Wizard
The following procedure adds a specific custom event, ClickIn. You can use this procedure to add other custom events. Substitute your custom event name and its parameters for the ClickIn event name and parameters.
To add the ClickIn custom event using the Add Event Wizard
Load your control's project.
In Class View, right-click your ActiveX control class to open the shortcut menu.
From the shortcut menu, click Add and then click Add Event.
This opens the Add Event Wizard.
In the Event name box, first select any existing event, then click on the Custom radio button, then type ClickIn.
In the Internal name box, type the name of the event's firing function. For this example, use the default value provided by the Add Event Wizard (FireClickIn).
Add a parameter, called xCoord (type OLE_XPOS_PIXELS), using the Parameter Name and Parameter Type controls.
Add a second parameter, called yCoord (type OLE_YPOS_PIXELS).
Click Finish to create the event.
Add Event Wizard Changes for Custom Events
When you add a custom event, the Add Event Wizard makes changes to the control class .H, .CPP, and .IDL files. The following code samples are specific to the ClickIn event.
The following lines are added to the header (.H) file of your control class:
void FireClickIn(OLE_XPOS_PIXELS xCoord, OLE_YPOS_PIXELS yCoord)
{
FireEvent(eventidClickIn, EVENT_PARAM(VTS_XPOS_PIXELS VTS_YPOS_PIXELS), xCoord, yCoord);
}
This code declares an inline function called FireClickIn that calls COleControl::FireEvent with the ClickIn event and parameters you defined using the Add Event Wizard.
In addition, the following line is added to the event map for the control, located in the implementation (.CPP) file of your control class:
EVENT_CUSTOM_ID("ClickIn", eventidClickIn, FireClickIn, VTS_XPOS_PIXELS VTS_YPOS_PIXELS)
This code maps the event ClickIn to the inline function FireClickIn, passing the parameters you defined using the Add Event Wizard.
Finally, the following line is added to your control's .IDL file:
[id(1)] void ClickIn(OLE_XPOS_PIXELS xCoord, OLE_YPOS_PIXELS yCoord);
This line assigns the ClickIn event a specific ID number, taken from the event's position in the Add Event Wizard event list. The entry in the event list allows a container to anticipate the event. For example, it might provide handler code to be executed when the event is fired.
Calling FireClickIn
Now that you have added the ClickIn custom event using the Add Event Wizard, you must decide when this event is to be fired. You do this by calling FireClickIn when the appropriate action occurs. For this discussion, the control uses the InCircle function inside a WM_LBUTTONDOWN message handler to fire the ClickIn event when a user clicks inside a circular or elliptical region. The following procedure adds the WM_LBUTTONDOWN handler.
To add a message handler with the Add Event Wizard
Load your control's project.
In Class View, select your ActiveX control class.
In the Properties window, click the Messages button.
The Properties window displays a list of messages that can be handled by the ActiveX control. Any message shown in bold already has a handler function assigned to it.
From the Properties window, select the message you want to handle. For this example, select WM_LBUTTONDOWN.
From the drop-down list box on the right, select <Add> OnLButtonDown.
Double-click the new handler function in Class View to jump to the message handler code in the implementation (.CPP) file of your ActiveX control.
The following code sample calls the InCircle function every time the left mouse button is clicked within the control window. This sample can be found in the WM_LBUTTONDOWN handler function, OnLButtonDown, in the Circ sample abstract.
void CMyAxUICtrl::OnLButtonDown(UINT nFlags, CPoint point)
{
if (InCircle(point))
FireClickIn(point.x, point.y);
COleControl::OnLButtonDown(nFlags, point);
}
注意
When the Add Event Wizard creates message handlers for mouse button actions, a call to the same message handler of the base class is automatically added. Do not remove this call. If your control uses any of the stock mouse messages, the message handlers in the base class must be called to ensure that mouse capture is handled properly.
In the following example, the event fires only when the click occurs inside a circular or elliptical region within the control. To achieve this behavior, you can place the InCircle function in your control's implementation (.CPP) file:
VARIANT_BOOL CMyAxUICtrl::InCircle(CPoint& point)
{
CRect rc;
GetClientRect(rc);
// Determine radii
double a = (rc.right - rc.left) / 2;
double b = (rc.bottom - rc.top) / 2;
// Determine x, y
double x = point.x - (rc.left + rc.right) / 2;
double y = point.y - (rc.top + rc.bottom) / 2;
// Apply ellipse formula
return ((x * x) / (a * a) + (y * y) / (b * b) <= 1);
}
You will also need to add the following declaration of the InCircle function to your control's header (.H) file:
VARIANT_BOOL InCircle(CPoint& point);
Custom Events with Stock Names
You can create custom events with the same name as stock events, however you can not implement both in the same control. For example, you might want to create a custom event called Click that does not fire when the stock event Click would normally fire. You could then fire the Click event at any time by calling its firing function.
The following procedure adds a custom Click event.
To add a custom event that uses a stock event name
Load your control's project.
In Class View, right-click your ActiveX control class to open the shortcut menu.
From the shortcut menu, click Add and then click Add Event.
This opens the Add Event Wizard.
In the Event Name drop-down list, select a stock event name. For this example, select Click.
For Event Type, select Custom.
Click Finish to create the event.
Call FireClick at appropriate places in your code.
See Also
Reference
Concepts
Change History
Date |
History |
Reason |
---|---|---|
July 2010 |
Updated for Visual Studio 2010 user interface. |
Customer feedback. |