TTTOOLINFOW structure (commctrl.h)

The TOOLINFO structure contains information about a tool in a tooltip control.

Syntax

typedef struct tagTOOLINFOW {
  UINT      cbSize;
  UINT      uFlags;
  HWND      hwnd;
  UINT_PTR  uId;
  RECT      rect;
  HINSTANCE hinst;
  LPWSTR    lpszText;
  LPARAM    lParam;
  void      *lpReserved;
} TTTOOLINFOW, *PTOOLINFOW, *LPTTTOOLINFOW;

Members

cbSize

Type: UINT

Size of this structure, in bytes. This member must be specified.

uFlags

Type: UINT

Flags that control the tooltip display. This member can be a combination of the following values:

Value Meaning
TTF_ABSOLUTE
Positions the tooltip window at the same coordinates provided by TTM_TRACKPOSITION. This flag must be used with the TTF_TRACK flag.
TTF_CENTERTIP
Centers the tooltip window below the tool specified by the uId member.
TTF_IDISHWND
Indicates that the uId member is the window handle to the tool. If this flag is not set, uId is the tool's identifier.
TTF_PARSELINKS

Version 6.0 and later. Indicates that links in the tooltip text should be parsed.

Note that Comctl32.dll version 6 is not redistributable but it is included in Windows or later. To use Comctl32.dll version 6, specify it in a manifest. For more information on manifests, see Enabling Visual Styles.

TTF_RTLREADING
Indicates that the tooltip text will be displayed in the opposite direction to the text in the parent window.
TTF_SUBCLASS
Indicates that the tooltip control should subclass the tool's window to intercept messages, such as WM_MOUSEMOVE. If this flag is not set, you must use the TTM_RELAYEVENT message to forward messages to the tooltip control. For a list of messages that a tooltip control processes, see TTM_RELAYEVENT.
TTF_TRACK
Positions the tooltip window next to the tool to which it corresponds and moves the window according to coordinates supplied by the TTM_TRACKPOSITION messages. You must activate this type of tool using the TTM_TRACKACTIVATE message.
TTF_TRANSPARENT
Causes the tooltip control to forward mouse event messages to the parent window. This is limited to mouse events that occur within the bounds of the tooltip window.

hwnd

Type: HWND

Handle to the window that contains the tool. If lpszText includes the LPSTR_TEXTCALLBACK value, this member identifies the window that receives the TTN_GETDISPINFO notification codes.

uId

Type: UINT_PTR

Application-defined identifier of the tool. If uFlags includes the TTF_IDISHWND flag, uId must specify the window handle to the tool.

rect

Type: RECT

The bounding rectangle coordinates of the tool. The coordinates are relative to the upper-left corner of the client area of the window identified by hwnd. If uFlags includes the TTF_IDISHWND flag, this member is ignored.

hinst

Type: HINSTANCE

Handle to the instance that contains the string resource for the tool. If lpszText specifies the identifier of a string resource, this member is used.

lpszText

Type: LPTSTR

Pointer to the buffer that contains the text for the tool, or identifier of the string resource that contains the text. This member is sometimes used to return values. If you need to examine the returned value, must point to a valid buffer of sufficient size. Otherwise, it can be set to NULL. If lpszText is set to LPSTR_TEXTCALLBACK, the control sends the TTN_GETDISPINFO notification code to the owner window to retrieve the text.

lParam

Type: LPARAM

Version 4.70 and later. A 32-bit application-defined value that is associated with the tool.

lpReserved

Type: void*

Reserved. Must be set to NULL.

Remarks

Normal windows display text left-to-right (LTR). Windows can be mirrored to display languages such as Hebrew or Arabic that read right-to-left (RTL). Normally, tooltip text is displayed in the same direction as the text in its parent window. If TTF_RTLREADING is set, tooltip text will read in the opposite direction from the text in the parent window.

Note

The commctrl.h header defines TTTOOLINFO as an alias that automatically selects the ANSI or Unicode version of this function based on the definition of the UNICODE preprocessor constant. Mixing usage of the encoding-neutral alias with code that is not encoding-neutral can lead to mismatches that result in compilation or runtime errors. For more information, see Conventions for Function Prototypes.

Requirements

Requirement Value
Minimum supported client Windows Vista [desktop apps only]
Minimum supported server Windows Server 2003 [desktop apps only]
Header commctrl.h