Question

I have a program with an option to enable minimizing to the taskbar's notification area. In order for this to work, I need a reliable way of detecting when the user has minimized the application.

How can I do that using the Windows API in a C++ application?

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Solution

When the user minimizes the window (either using the box on the title bar, or by selecting the "Minimize" option from the system menu), your application will receive a WM_SYSCOMMAND message. The wParam parameter of that message will contain the value SC_MINIMIZE, which indicates the particular type of system command that is being requested. In this case, you don't care about the lParam.

So you need to set up a message map that listens for a WM_SYSCOMMAND message with the wParam set to SC_MINIMIZE. Upon receipt of such a message, you should execute your code to minimize your application to the taskbar notification area, and return 0 (indicating that you've processed the message).

I'm not sure what GUI framework you're using. The sample code could potentially look very different for different toolkits. Here's what you might use in a straight Win32 C application:

switch (message)
{
case WM_SYSCOMMAND:
    if ((wParam & 0xFFF0) == SC_MINIMIZE)
    {
        // shrink the application to the notification area
        // ...

        return 0;
    }
    break;
}

OTHER TIPS

I think you are looking for WM_SIZE. When you get this, check the wParam to get the specifics. Here is the MSDN page.

WM_SIZE

You can check the area size returned from GetClientRect - if zero it's minimised, works for me but may not work in all cases.

That's what IsIconic is supposed to determine, but it doesn't work consistently for me. (Oh, for a consistent way to determine this...)

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