Platform SDK: DirectX |
The IDirectInput7::CreateDevice method creates and initializes an instance of a device based on a given GUID, and obtains an IDirectInputDevice interface. This method has been superseded by IDirectInput7::CreateDeviceEx.
HRESULT CreateDevice( REFGUID rguid, LPDIRECTINPUTDEVICE *lplpDirectInputDevice, LPUNKNOWN pUnkOuter );
For the preceding GUID values to be valid, your application must define INITGUID before all other preprocessor directives at the beginning of the source file, or link to Dxguid.lib.
If the method succeeds, the return value is DI_OK.
If the method fails, the return value can be one of the following:
DIERR_DEVICENOTREG |
DIERR_INVALIDPARAM |
DIERR_NOINTERFACE |
DIERR_NOTINITIALIZED |
DIERR_OUTOFMEMORY |
In C++ the rguid parameter must be passed by reference; in C, which does not permit passing by reference, it must be passed by address. The following is an example of a C++ call:
lpdi->CreateDevice(GUID_SysKeyboard, &pdev, NULL);
The following shows the same call in C:
lpdi->lpVtbl->CreateDevice(lpdi, &GUID_SysKeyboard, &pdev, NULL);
Calling this method with pUnkOuter = NULL is equivalent to creating the object by CoCreateInstance(&CLSID_DirectInputDevice, NULL, CLSCTX_INPROC_SERVER, riid, lplpDirectInputDevice) and then initializing it with Initialize.
Calling this method with pUnkOuter != NULL is equivalent to creating the object by CoCreateInstance(&CLSID_DirectInputDevice, punkOuter, CLSCTX_INPROC_SERVER, &IID_IUnknown, lplpDirectInputDevice). The aggregated object must be initialized manually.
Windows NT/2000: Requires Windows 2000.
Windows 95/98: Requires Windows 95 or later. Available as a redistributable for Windows 95.
Header: Declared in dinput.h.
Import Library: Use dinput.lib.