If the window you were interested in were not a console window, this would have been very simple to do by just tapping into the appropriate focus event. But console windows don't have focus events, so the easy way out is not available here.
What you can do is set up an event handler to receive WinEvents generated by the UI Automation services. An event is generated whenever the window focus changes; you can get the HWND of the newly focused window and compare it to that of your console window. If they match, you just got focus; if they don't, you don't have focus (either just lost it or never had it to begin with).
The most convenient way to tap into UI Automation is through the System.Windows.Automation
namespace. You can set up the event handler with AddAutomationFocusChangedEventHandler
, which will give you an instance of AutomationFocusChangedEventArgs
from which you can determine which window has received focus.
Here's some sample code:
AutomationFocusChangedEventHandler focusHandler = OnFocusChange;
Automation.AddAutomationFocusChangedEventHandler(focusHandler);
MessageBox.Show("Listening to focus changes");
Automation.RemoveAutomationFocusChangedEventHandler(focusHandler);
where OnFocusChange
is:
void OnFocusChange(object source, AutomationFocusChangedEventArgs e)
{
var focusedHandle = new IntPtr(AutomationElement.FocusedElement.Current.NativeWindowHandle);
var myConsoleHandle = Process.GetCurrentProcess().MainWindowHandle;
if (focusedHandle == myConsoleHandle)
{
// ...
}
}
Note that I am assuming the console is your process's main window for simplicity; if that's not the case, you need to get a HWND to the console window some other way.
Also note that in order to receive automation events, your process must be running a message loop (in this case also known as a "dispatcher loop"), which in turn requires a thread being dedicated to running it. In the example above this happens automatically when MessageBox.Show
is called, but in the general case you will have to take proper care of it.