I'm working on wpf c# application and I need to detect when user press "/" but I'm having trouble with finding " / " e.Key, I saw there is Key.OemBackslash
and stuffs like that, but I can't find right event for " / " (forward slash) ...
Thanks guys,
Cheers
It should be Key.OemQuestion
on a US keyboard. But on a Swedish keyboard it is D7
so it depends. The keys on the keyboard doesn't always produce the same character.
Depending on what you are trying to do you may be better off handling the PreviewTextInput
event:
protected override void OnPreviewTextInput(TextCompositionEventArgs e)
{
base.OnPreviewTextInput(e);
if (e.Text == "/")
{
Debug.WriteLine("...");
}
}
You can the following methods (see this site) to get the character from the key.
protected override void OnPreviewKeyDown(KeyEventArgs e)
{
bool toUnicodeIsTrue=false;
char t = GetCharFromKey(e.Key, ref toUnicodeIsTrue);
if ( t == '/')
{
// do stuff
}
base.OnPreviewKeyDown(e);
}
public static char GetCharFromKey(System.Windows.Input.Key key, ref bool toUnicodeIsTrue)
{
toUnicodeIsTrue = true;
char ch = ' ';
// First, you need to get the VirtualKey code. Thankfully, there’s a simple class
// called KeyInterop, which exposes a static method VirtualKeyFromKey
// that gets us this information
int virtualKey = System.Windows.Input.KeyInterop.VirtualKeyFromKey(key);
//Then, we need to get the character. This is much trickier.
//First we have to get the keyboard state and then we have to map that VirtualKey
//we got in the first step to a ScanCode, and finally, convert all of that to Unicode,
//because .Net doesn’t really speak ASCII
byte[] keyboardState = new byte[256];
GetKeyboardState(keyboardState);
uint scanCode = MapVirtualKey((uint)virtualKey, MapType.MAPVK_VK_TO_VSC);
StringBuilder stringBuilder = new StringBuilder(2);
int result = ToUnicode((uint)virtualKey, scanCode, keyboardState, stringBuilder, stringBuilder.Capacity, 0);
switch (result)
{
case -1:
toUnicodeIsTrue = false;
break;
case 0:
toUnicodeIsTrue = false;
break;
case 1:
{
ch = stringBuilder[0];
break;
}
default:
{
ch = stringBuilder[0];
break;
}
}
return ch;
}
[System.Runtime.InteropServices.DllImport("user32.dll")]
public static extern bool GetKeyboardState(byte[] lpKeyState);
[System.Runtime.InteropServices.DllImport("user32.dll")]
public static extern uint MapVirtualKey(uint uCode, MapType uMapType);
public enum MapType : uint
{
MAPVK_VK_TO_VSC = 0x0,
MAPVK_VSC_TO_VK = 0x1,
MAPVK_VK_TO_CHAR = 0x2,
MAPVK_VSC_TO_VK_EX = 0x3,
}
[System.Runtime.InteropServices.DllImport("user32.dll")]
public static extern int ToUnicode(
uint wVirtKey,
uint wScanCode,
byte[] lpKeyState,
[System.Runtime.InteropServices.Out, System.Runtime.InteropServices.MarshalAs(System.Runtime.InteropServices.UnmanagedType.LPWStr, SizeParamIndex = 4)]
StringBuilder pwszBuff,
int cchBuff,
uint wFlags);
}
My old Answer:
protected override void OnPreviewKeyDown(KeyEventArgs e)
{ //***
if (e.Key == Key.Oem2)
{
// do stuff
}
base.OnPreviewKeyDown(e);
}
Note that the name starts with "oem" (Original Equipment Manufacturer), which means the keyboard manufacturer is responsible for its functionality and it varies in local keyboards. So, you can set a break point in
{//***
line of my code and check e.Key property.