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Things the Documentation left out, part N

I recently had two people ask me the same question:

"Why can't I insert more than one character into a composition on Notepad?"

It's actually a bit more complicated than that, since this behavior only appears to happen on Windows XP with a US English text service.  (Japanese text services appear to work correctly.)

I just had a chance to figure out what was going on here, and, since it doesn't seem to be documented anywhere else, I thought I'd post the answer so that the next poor sod doesn't have to spend eternity scratching his head wondering why he can't get it to work.

After a longish debugging bout, and a bunch of searching through the XP source code, I have the answer.

The answer is that there's a Text Event Sink attached to the TSF-unaware context, and when the context changes, this event sink looks to see if the changed text has the GUID_PROP_COMPOSING property attached to it.  If it doesn't, it terminates the composition.

So, if you want to have your text services insert more than one character into a composition, you need to make sure that your text has the GUID_PROP_COMPOSING property set to 1.

 I had previously written some code to manage this property.  However, you cannot explicitly set the GUID_PROP_COMPOSING property -

ITfProperty::SetValue() will return TF_E_READONLY if you do.

What you do need to do is use the ITfComposition::ShiftStart and ITfComposition::ShiftEnd methods to move the start and ending points of your composition to cover the text.  These methods will update the GUID_PROP_COMPOSING property directly.

The code to do that would look like this:

 

BOOL CTextService::_SetCompositionComposing(TfEditCookie ec, ITfContext *pContext)
{
    ITfRange *pRangeComposition;
    ITfProperty *pComposingProperty;
    HRESULT hr;

    // the composition requires a range and the context it lives in
    if (_pComposition->GetRange(&pRangeComposition) != S_OK)
        return FALSE;

    hr = E_FAIL;

    // get our the display attribute property
    if (pContext->GetProperty(GUID_PROP_COMPOSING, &pComposingProperty) == S_OK)
    {
        VARIANT var;
        // set the value over the range
        var.vt = VT_I4;
        var.lVal = 1;

        hr = pComposingProperty->SetValue(ec, pRangeComposition, &var);

        pComposingProperty->Release();
    }

    pRangeComposition->Release();
    return (hr == S_OK);
}

When you're ready to finalize your composition, you should clear the property over the composed text by calling ITfProperty::Clear().

Note that none of the sample text services do this.

Comments

  • Anonymous
    May 15, 2009
    In a previous post , I mentioned that you need to set the GUID_PROP_COMPOSING property across text in