Tutorial 4: Painting with Text

In this tutorial, we will learn how to "paint" text in the client area of a window. We'll also learn about device context.

You can download the source code here.

Preliminary:

Text in Windows is a type of GUI object.  Each character is composed of numerous pixels that are lumped together into a distinct pattern. That's why it's called "painting" instead of "writing". Normally, you paint text in your own client area (actually, you can paint outside client area but that's another story).  Putting text on screen in Windows is drastically different from DOS. In DOS, you can think of the screen in 80x25 dimension. But in Windows, the screen are shared by several programs. Some rules must be enforced to avoid programs writing over each other screen data. Windows ensures this by limiting painting area of each window to its own client area only. The size of client area of a window is not constant. The user can change the size anytime. So you must determine the dimension of client area dynamically, at runtime.

Before you can paint something on the client area, you must ask for permission from Windows. That's right, you don't have absolute control of the screen as you were in DOS.  You must ask Windows for permission to paint your own client area. Windows will determine the size of your client area, font, colors and other GDI attributes and send a handle to device context back to your program. You can then use the device context as a passport to painting on your client area.

What is a device context? It's just a data structure maintained internally by Windows. A device context is associated with a particular device, such as a printer or video display. For a video display, a device context is usually associated with a particular window on the display.

Some of the values in the device context are graphic attributes such as colors, font etc. These are default values which you can change at will. They exist to help reduce the load from having to specify these attributes in every GDI function calls.

When a program need to paint, it must obtain a handle to a device context. Normally, there's two ways to accomplish this.

One thing you must remember, after you're through with the device context handle, you must release it during the processing of a single message. Don't obtain the handle in response to one message and release it in response to another.

Windows posts WM_PAINT messages to a window to notify that it's now time to repaint its client area. Windows does not save the content of client area of a window.  Instead, when a situation occurs that warrants a repaint of client area (such as when a window was covered by another and is just brought back in front), Windows put WM_PAINT message in that window's message queue. It's the responsibility of that window to repaint its own client area. You must gather all information about how to repaint your client area in the WM_PAINT section of your window procedure, so the window procudure can repaint the client area when WM_PAINT message arrives.

Another concept you must come to terms with is the invalid rectangle. Windows defines an invalid rectangle as the smallest rectangular area in the client area that needs to be repainted. When Windows detects an invalid rectangle in the client area of a window , it posts WM_PAINT message to that window. In response to WM_PAINT message, the window can obtain a paintstruct structure which contains, among others, the coordinate of the invalid rectangle. You call BeginPaint in response to WM_PAINT message to validate the invalid rectangle. If you don't process WM_PAINT message, at the very least you must call DefWindowProc or ValidateRect to validate the invalid rectangle else Windows will repeatedly send you WM_PAINT message.

Here's the steps you perform in response to a WM_PAINT message:

Note that you don't have to explicitly validate the invalid rectangle. It's automatically done by the BeginPaint call. Between BeginPaint-Endpaint pair, you can call any GDI functions to paint your client area. Nearly everyone of them requires a handle to device context as a parameter.

Content:

We will write a program that display a text string "Win32 assembly is great and easy!" in the center of the client area.
 
include windows.inc
includelib user32.lib
includelib kernel32.lib

.DATA
ClassName db "SimpleWinClass",0
AppName  db "Our First Window",0
OurText  db "Win32 assembly is great and easy!",0

.DATA?
hInstance HINSTANCE ?
CommandLine LPSTR ?

.CODE
        start:
 invoke GetModuleHandle, NULL
 mov    hInstance,eax
 invoke GetCommandLine
 invoke WinMain, hInstance,NULL,CommandLine, SW_SHOWDEFAULT
 invoke ExitProcess,eax

WinMain proc hinst:HINSTANCE, hPrevInst:HINSTANCE, CmdLine:LPSTR, CmdShow:SDWORD
    LOCAL wc:WNDCLASSEX
    LOCAL msg:MSG
    LOCAL hwnd:HWND
    mov   wc.cbSize,SIZEOF WNDCLASSEX
    mov   wc.style, CS_HREDRAW or CS_VREDRAW
    mov   wc.lpfnWndProc, OFFSET WndProc
    mov   wc.cbClsExtra,NULL
    mov   wc.cbWndExtra,NULL
    push  hInstance
    pop   wc.hInstance
    mov   wc.hbrBackground,COLOR_WINDOW+1
    mov   wc.lpszMenuName,NULL
    mov   wc.lpszClassName,OFFSET ClassName
    invoke LoadIcon,NULL,IDI_APPLICATION
    mov   wc.hIcon,eax
    mov   wc.hIconSm,0
    invoke LoadCursor,NULL,IDC_ARROW
    mov   wc.hCursor,eax
    invoke RegisterClassEx, addr wc
    invoke CreateWindowEx,NULL,ADDR ClassName,ADDR AppName,\
           WS_OVERLAPPEDWINDOW,CW_USEDEFAULT,\
           CW_USEDEFAULT,CW_USEDEFAULT,CW_USEDEFAULT,NULL,NULL,\
           hInst,NULL
    mov   hwnd,eax
    invoke ShowWindow, hwnd,SW_SHOWNORMAL
    invoke UpdateWindow, hwnd
        .WHILE TRUE
                invoke GetMessage, ADDR msg,NULL,0,0
                .BREAK .IF (!eax)
                invoke TranslateMessage, ADDR msg
                invoke DispatchMessage, ADDR msg
        .ENDW
        mov     eax,msg.wParam
        ret
WinMain endp

WndProc proc hWnd:HWND, uMsg:UINT, wParam:WPARAM, lParam:LPARAM
    LOCAL hdc:HDC
    LOCAL ps:PAINTSTRUCT
    LOCAL rect:RECT
    mov   eax,uMsg
    .IF eax==WM_DESTROY
        invoke PostQuitMessage,NULL
    .ELSEIF eax==WM_PAINT
        invoke BeginPaint,hWnd, ADDR ps
        mov    hdc,eax
        invoke GetClientRect,hWnd, ADDR rect
        invoke DrawText, hdc,ADDR OurText,-1, ADDR rect, \
                DT_SINGLELINE or DT_CENTER or DT_VCENTER
        invoke EndPaint,hWnd, ADDR ps
    .ELSE
        invoke DefWindowProc,hWnd,uMsg,wParam,lParam
        ret
    .ENDIF
    xor   eax, eax
    ret
WndProc endp
end start



The majority of the code is the same as the example in tutorial 3. I'll explain only the important changes.

    LOCAL hdc:HDC
    LOCAL ps:PAINTSTRUCT
    LOCAL rect:RECT
 
These are local variables that are used by GDI functions in our WM_PAINT section. hdc is used to store the handle to device context returned from BeginPaint call. ps is a PAINTSTRUCT structure. Normally you don't use the values in ps. It's passed to BeginPaint function and Windows fills it with appropriate values. You then pass ps to EndPaint function when you finish painting the client area. rect is a RECT structure defined as follows:
 

RECT Struct
    left           LONG ?
    top           LONG ?
    right        LONG ?
    bottom    LONG ?
RECT ends
Left and top are the coordinates of the upper left corner of a rectangle Right and bottom are the coordinates of the lower right corner. One thing to remember: The origin of the x-y axes is at the upper left corner of the client area. So the point y=10 is BELOW the point y=0.

        invoke BeginPaint,hWnd, ADDR ps
        mov    hdc,eax
        invoke GetClientRect,hWnd, ADDR rect
        invoke DrawText, hdc,ADDR OurText,-1, ADDR rect, \
                DT_SINGLELINE or DT_CENTER or DT_VCENTER
        invoke EndPaint,hWnd, ADDR ps

In response to WM_PAINT message, you call BeginPaint with handle to the window you want to paint and an uninitialized PAINTSTRUCT structure as parameters. After successful call, eax contains the handle to device context. Next you call GetClientRect to retrieve the dimension of the client area. The dimension is returned in rect variable which you pass to DrawText as one of its parameter. DrawText's syntax is:

int WINAPI DrawText(HDC hdc,
                                    LPCSTR lpString,
                                    int nCount,
                                    LPRECT lpRect,
                                    UNIT uFormat);

DrawText is a high-level text output API function. It handles some gory details such as word wrap, centering etc. so you could concentrate on the string you want to paint. Its low-level brother, TextOut, will be examined in the next tutorial. DrawText formats a text string to fit within the bounds of a rectangle. It uses the currently selected font,color and background (in the device context) to draw the text.Lines are wrapped to fit within the bounds of the rectangle. It returns the height of the output text in device units, in our case, pixels. Let's see its parameters:

After you finish painting the client area, you must call EndPaint function to release the handle to device context.
That's it. We can summarize the salient points here:
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