The WinMain function is called by the system as the initial entry point for a Win32-based application.
int WINAPI WinMain(
HINSTANCE hInstance, |
// handle to current instance |
HINSTANCE hPrevInstance, |
// handle to previous instance |
LPSTR lpCmdLine, |
// pointer to command line |
int nCmdShow |
// show state of window |
); |
Value |
Meaning |
SW_HIDE |
Hides the window and activates another window. |
SW_MINIMIZE |
Minimizes the specified window and activates the top-level window in the system’s list. |
SW_RESTORE |
Activates and displays a window. If the window is minimized or maximized, Windows restores it to its original size and position (same as SW_SHOWNORMAL). |
SW_SHOW |
Activates a window and displays it in its current size and position. |
SW_SHOWMAXIMIZED |
Activates a window and displays it as a maximized window. |
SW_SHOWMINIMIZED |
Activates a window and displays it as an icon. |
SW_SHOWMINNOACTIVE |
Displays a window as an icon. The active window remains active. |
SW_SHOWNA |
Displays a window in its current state. The active window remains active. |
SW_SHOWNOACTIVATE |
Displays a window in its most recent size and position. The active window remains active. |
SW_SHOWNORMAL |
Activates and displays a window. If the window is minimized or maximized, Windows restores it to its original size and position (same as SW_RESTORE). |
If the function succeeds, terminating when it receives a WM_QUIT message, it should return the exit value contained in that message’s wParam parameter. If the function terminates before entering the message loop, it should return zero.
Your WinMain should initialize the application, display its main window, and enter a message retrieval-and-dispatch loop that is the top-level control structure for the remainder of the application’s execution. Terminate the message loop when it receives a WM_QUIT message. At that point, your WinMain should exit the application, returning the value passed in the WM_QUIT message’s wParam parameter. If WM_QUIT was received as a result of calling PostQuitMessage, the value of wParam is the value of the PostQuitMessage function’s nExitCode parameter. For more information, see Creating a Message Loop.
ANSI applications can use the lpCmdLine parameter of the WinMain function to access the command-line string, excluding the program name. The reason that WinMain cannot return Unicode strings is that lpCmdLine uses the LPSTR data type, not the LPTSTR data type. The GetCommandLine function can be used to access Unicode strings in the command line, because it uses the LPTSTR data type.
CreateMutex, DispatchMessage, GetCommandLine, GetMessage, PostQuitMessage, TranslateMessage
file: /Techref/os/win/api/win32/func/src/f91_17.htm, 7KB, , updated: 2000/4/7 11:19, local time: 2024/11/24 15:46,
3.14.249.124:LOG IN
|
©2024 These pages are served without commercial sponsorship. (No popup ads, etc...).Bandwidth abuse increases hosting cost forcing sponsorship or shutdown. This server aggressively defends against automated copying for any reason including offline viewing, duplication, etc... Please respect this requirement and DO NOT RIP THIS SITE. Questions? <A HREF="http://sxlist.com/TECHREF/os/win/api/win32/func/src/f91_17.htm"> WinMain</A> |
Did you find what you needed? |
Welcome to sxlist.com!sales, advertizing, & kind contributors just like you! Please don't rip/copy (here's why Copies of the site on CD are available at minimal cost. |
Welcome to sxlist.com! |
.