IOleWindow::ContextSensitiveHelp (Windows CE 5.0)

Send Feedback

Determines whether context-sensitive help mode should be entered during an in-place activation session.

HRESULT ContextSensitiveHelp(   BOOL fEnterMode);

Parameters

  • fEnterMode
    [in] TRUE if help mode should be entered; FALSE if it should be exited.

Return Values

This method supports the following return values:

Value Description
S_OK The help mode was entered or exited successfully, depending on the value passed in fEnterMode.
E_INVALIDARG The call to the method contains an invalid argument.
E_OUTOFMEMORY The call could not be completed due to lack of free memory.
E_UNEXPECTED The call to the method unexpectedly failed.

Remarks

Applications can invoke context-sensitive help when the user

  • Presses SHIFT+F1, then clicks a topic.
  • Presses F1 when a menu item is selected.

When SHIFT+F1 is pressed, either the frame or active object can receive the keystrokes. If the container's frame receives the keystrokes, it calls its containing document's IOleWindow::ContextSensitiveHelp method with fEnterMode set to TRUE. This propagates the help state to all of its in-place objects so they can correctly handle the mouse click or WM_COMMAND.

If an active object receives the SHIFT+F1 keystrokes, it calls the container's IOleInPlaceSite::ContextSensitiveHelp method with fEnterMode TRUE, which then recursively calls each of its in-place sites until there are no more to be notified. The container then calls its document's or frame's ContextSensitiveHelp method with fEnterMode TRUE.

When in context-sensitive help mode, an object that receives the mouse click can either:

  • Ignore the click if it does not support context-sensitive help.
  • Tell all the other objects to exit context-sensitive help mode with ContextSensitiveHelp set to FALSE and then provide help for that context.

An object in context-sensitive help mode that receives a WM_COMMAND should tell all the other in-place objects to exit context-sensitive help mode and then provide help for the command.

If a container application is to support context-sensitive help on menu items, it must either provide its own message filter so that it can intercept the F1 key or ask the OLE library to add a message filter by calling OleSetMenuDescriptor, passing valid, non-NULL values for the lpFrame and lpActiveObj parameters.

Requirements

OS Versions: Windows CE 4.0 and later.
Header: oleidl.h.

See Also

OleSetMenuDescriptor

IOleWindow

Send Feedback on this topic to the authors

Feedback FAQs

© 2006 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.