In my application, I want to let users customize keyboard shortcuts, just like it's done in Visual Studio's keyboard options. The user can focus a blank text box and then type any shortcut he wants to assign to a command.
The closest I've come to make it work is by subscribing to the TextBox.PreviewKeyDown event, setting it as handled to prevent actual text input in the text box. I then ignore the KeyDown events associated with modifier keys (is there a cleaner way to determine if a Key is a modifier key?).
// Code-behind
private void ShortcutTextBox_PreviewKeyDown(object sender, KeyEventArgs e)
{
// The text box grabs all input
e.Handled = true;
if (e.Key == Key.LeftCtrl ||
e.Key == Key.RightCtrl ||
e.Key == Key.LeftAlt ||
e.Key == Key.RightAlt ||
e.Key == Key.LeftShift ||
e.Key == Key.RightShift)
return;
string shortcutText = "";
if ((Keyboard.Modifiers & ModifierKeys.Control) == ModifierKeys.Control)
shortcutText += "Ctrl+";
if ((Keyboard.Modifiers & ModifierKeys.Shift) == ModifierKeys.Shift)
shortcutText += "Shift+";
if ((Keyboard.Modifiers & ModifierKeys.Alt) == ModifierKeys.Alt)
shortcutText += "Alt+";
_ShortcutTextBox.Text = shortcutText + e.Key.ToString();
}
The above works for any shortcut starting with Ctrl and Ctrl+Shift, but fails for any Alt shortcuts. The e.Key is always set to Key.System
when I press a shortcut containing Alt.
How can I record Alt shortcuts from the user? Is there a better, more robust way to record shortcuts form the user?
The trick is to use the SystemKey property if the Key property is set to Key.System
:
private void ShortcutTextBox_PreviewKeyDown(object sender, KeyEventArgs e)
{
// The text box grabs all input.
e.Handled = true;
// Fetch the actual shortcut key.
Key key = (e.Key == Key.System ? e.SystemKey : e.Key);
// Ignore modifier keys.
if (key == Key.LeftShift || key == Key.RightShift
|| key == Key.LeftCtrl || key == Key.RightCtrl
|| key == Key.LeftAlt || key == Key.RightAlt
|| key == Key.LWin || key == Key.RWin) {
return;
}
// Build the shortcut key name.
StringBuilder shortcutText = new StringBuilder();
if ((Keyboard.Modifiers & ModifierKeys.Control) != 0) {
shortcutText.Append("Ctrl+");
}
if ((Keyboard.Modifiers & ModifierKeys.Shift) != 0) {
shortcutText.Append("Shift+");
}
if ((Keyboard.Modifiers & ModifierKeys.Alt) != 0) {
shortcutText.Append("Alt+");
}
shortcutText.Append(key.ToString());
// Update the text box.
_ShortcutTextBox.Text = shortcutText.ToString();
}
I added the left and right Windows
keys to the modifier list, because they sometimes appeared in the shortcut key name when a complex ( Ctrl+Shift+Alt
) key combination was typed from a Terminal Server session. They're never present in Keyboard.Modifiers
, though, since they're reserved for global shortcuts, so I don't handle them there.
I also used a StringBuilder to avoid creating too many string
instances.
This solution works with any key combination, except Shift+Alt
(the Alt
modifier is not seen in that case). That might be an artifact of my Terminal Server environment, though, so your mileage may vary.
Finally, I added a _File
menu to the window to see what would happen, and the Alt+F
shortcut key is effectively trapped by the text box before it reaches the menu, which seems to be what you want.
Hi
if You used WPF-Command
in your application you can use this:
<Window.InputBindings>
<KeyBinding Command="YourCommnad"
Gesture="CTRL+C" />
</Window.InputBindings>
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