问题
I have a Windows shell extension that uses IShellIconOverlayIdentifier interface to display overlay icons on files and folders. My extension is a little like TortoiseCVS or TortoiseSVN.
Sometimes I need to make Windows Explorer redraw all it's icons. To do this, I call SHChangeNotify like this:
SHChangeNotify(SHCNE_ASSOCCHANGED, SHCNF_IDLIST, NULL, NULL)
This refreshes the desktop and right hand pane of any open explorer windows. It doesn't refresh the folder tree on the left hand side of any Explorer windows.
So I tried sending WM_SETTINGCHANGE like this:
SendMessage(HWND_BROADCAST, WM_SETTINGCHANGE, 0, 0)
on Vista this refreshes the folder tree, but not the right hand pane.
The combination of SHChangeNotify()
followed by WM_SETTINGCHANGE
seems to work quite well on Vista. But I still can't refresh the folder tree on XP if it is displayed.
Does anyone have any ideas how to do this better?
Is there a better solution for XP?
Sending SHCNE_ASSOCCHANGED
is a bit like clubbing Explorer over the head. It causes the whole desktop to refresh quite violently and casues any open Explorer windows to loose there scroll position. Is there anything that's a bit less violent?
回答1:
Does anyone have any ideas how to do this better?
Personally I don't know. You mention the Tortoise programs which do a similar thing, so an excellent starting point would be to have a look at what they do in their source :)
These look to be the relevant source files that handle this problem:
- TortoiseCVS - ShellUtils.cpp
- TortoiseSVN - ShellUpdater.cpp (username: "guest", password: "")
I note in the RebuildIcons
method in each of those will:
- set the shell icon size or colour depth to a temporary value
- updates all the windows by broadcasting the setting change
- resets the shell icon size or colour depth to the original value
- updates all the windows a second time with a broadcast of the setting change
Perhaps this is part of the trick to get things working in XP.
回答2:
Use spy++ to see what WM_COMMMAND message gets sent when you press F5 in windows explorer or find what menu message is used for view/refresh
Then use FindWindow to get the explorer window you want and send the WM_COMMAND recorded earlier etc message to it.
This is a fun way to control all sorts of Windows programs.
回答3:
You can also send a WM_KEYDOWN message with the F5 keycode to all open explorer windows. This is a bit of a hack though.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/647316/how-can-i-programmatically-refresh-windows-explorer