WM_HSCROLL

This message is sent to a window when a scroll event occurs in the window’s standard horizontal scroll bar. This message is also sent to the owner of a horizontal scroll bar control when a scroll event occurs in the control.

At a Glance

Header file: Winuser.h
Windows CE versions: 1.0 and later

Syntax

WM_HSCROLL nScrollCode = (int)LOWORD(wParam); nPos = (short int)HIWORD(wParam); hwndScrollBar = (HWND) lParam;

Parameters

nScrollCode

Value of the low-order word of wParam. Specifies a scroll bar value that indicates the user’s scrolling request. It is be one of the following values:

Value Description
SB_ENDSCROLL Ends scroll.
SB_LEFT Scrolls to the upper left.
SB_RIGHT Scrolls to the lower right.
SB_LINELEFT Scrolls left by one unit.
SB_LINERIGHT Scrolls right by one unit.
SB_PAGELEFT Scrolls left by the width of the window.
SB_PAGERIGHT Scrolls right by the width of the window.
SB_THUMBPOSITION The user has dragged the scroll box (thumb) and released the mouse button. The nPos parameter indicates the position of the scroll box at the end of the drag operation.
SB_THUMBTRACK The user is dragging the scroll box. This message is sent repeatedly until the user releases the mouse button. The nPos parameter indicates the position that the scroll box has been dragged to.

nPos

Value of the high-order word of wParam. Specifies the current position of the scroll box if the nScrollCode parameter is SB_THUMBPOSITION or SB_THUMBTRACK; otherwise, nPos is not used.

hwndScrollBar

If the message is sent by a scroll bar, then hwndScrollBar is the handle to the scroll bar control. If the message is not sent by a scroll bar, hwndScrollBar is NULL.

Return Values

An application should return zero if it processes this message.

Remarks

The SB_THUMBTRACK notification message is typically used by applications that provide feedback as the user drags the scroll box.

If an application scrolls the content of the window, it must also reset the position of the scroll box by using the SetScrollPos function.

Note that the WM_HSCROLL message carries only 16 bits of scroll box position data. Thus, applications that rely solely on WM_HSCROLL (and WM_VSCROLL) for scroll position data have a practical maximum position value of 65,535.

However, because the SetScrollInfo, SetScrollPos, SetScrollRange, GetScrollInfo, GetScrollPos, and GetScrollRange functions support 32-bit scroll bar position data, there is a way to circumvent the 16-bit barrier of the WM_HSCROLL and WM_VSCROLL messages. See GetScrollInfo for a description of the technique.

See Also

SetScrollPos, SetScrollRange, WM_VSCROLL