ACCELERATORS resource
Defines one or more accelerators for an application. An accelerator is a keystroke defined by the application to give the user a quick way to perform a task.
acctablename ACCELERATORS [optional-statements] {event, idvalue, [type] [options]... }
Parameters
-
acctablename
-
Unique name or a 16-bit unsigned integer value that identifies the resource.
-
optional-statements
-
Zero or more of the following statements.
Statement Description CHARACTERISTICS dword User-defined information about a resource that can be used by tools that read and write resource files. For more information, see CHARACTERISTICS. LANGUAGE language, sublanguage Specifies the language for the resource. For more information, see LANGUAGE. VERSION dword User-defined version number for the resource that can be used by tools that read and write resource files. For more information, see VERSION. -
event
-
Keystroke to be used as an accelerator. It can be any one of the following character types.
Type Description "char" A single character enclosed in double quotation marks ("). The character can be preceded by a caret (^), meaning that the character is a control character. Character An integer value representing a character. The type parameter must be ASCII. virtual-key character An integer value representing a virtual key. The virtual key for alphanumeric keys can be specified by placing the uppercase letter or number in double quotation marks (for example, "9" or "C"). The type parameter must be VIRTKEY. -
idvalue
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a 16-bit unsigned integer value that identifies the accelerator.
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type
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Required only when the event parameter is a character or a virtual-key character. The type parameter specifies either ASCII or VIRTKEY; the integer value of event is interpreted accordingly. When VIRTKEY is specified and event contains a string, event must be uppercase.
-
options
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options that define the accelerator. This parameter can be one or more of the following values.
Option Description NOINVERT Specifies that no top-level menu item is highlighted when the accelerator is used. This is useful when defining accelerators for actions such as scrolling that do not correspond to a menu item. If NOINVERT is omitted, a top-level menu item will be highlighted (if possible) when the accelerator is used. This attribute is obsolete and retained only for backward compatibility with resource files designed for 16-bit Windows. ALT Causes the accelerator to be activated only if the ALT key is down. Applies only to virtual keys. SHIFT Causes the accelerator to be activated only if the SHIFT key is down. Applies only to virtual keys CONTROL Defines the character as a control character (the accelerator is only activated if the CONTROL key is down). This has the same effect as using a caret (^) before the accelerator character in the event parameter. Applies only to virtual keys
Certain attributes are also supported for backward compatibility. For more information, see Common Resource Attributes.
Remarks
The TranslateAccelerator function is used to translate accelerator messages from the application queue into WM_COMMAND or WM_SYSCOMMAND messages.
Examples
The following example demonstrates the use of accelerator keys.
1 ACCELERATORS
{
"^C", IDDCLEAR ; control C
"K", IDDCLEAR ; shift K
"k", IDDELLIPSE, ALT ; alt k
98, IDDRECT, ASCII ; b
66, IDDSTAR, ASCII ; B (shift b)
"g", IDDRECT ; g
"G", IDDSTAR ; G (shift G)
VK_F1, IDDCLEAR, VIRTKEY ; F1
VK_F1, IDDSTAR, CONTROL, VIRTKEY ; control F1
VK_F1, IDDELLIPSE, SHIFT, VIRTKEY ; shift F1
VK_F1, IDDRECT, ALT, VIRTKEY ; alt F1
VK_F2, IDDCLEAR, ALT, SHIFT, VIRTKEY ; alt shift F2
VK_F2, IDDSTAR, CONTROL, SHIFT, VIRTKEY ; ctrl shift F2
VK_F2, IDDRECT, ALT, CONTROL, VIRTKEY ; alt control F2
}
See also