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Wordle 482 3/6*
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Happiness will never come to those who fail to appreciate what they already have. -Anon
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Wordle 482 4/6
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Software rusts. Simon Stephenson, ca 1994. So does this signature. me, 2012
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Wordle 482 4/6
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Wordle 482 4/6
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Wordle 482 4/6
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"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
"Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Wordle 482 4/6
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New laptop, 1 played, 100% win, 1 current streak, 1 max streak
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A perfect score!
I'd quit while I was ahead, if I was you ...
I'm currently at:
STATISTICS
253 Played
100 Win %
178 Current Streak
178 Max Streak That "100% Win %" is a rounding error: I lost one a while back.
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
"Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Life should not be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty and well-preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside in a cloud of smoke, thoroughly used up, totally worn out, and loudly proclaiming βWow! What a Ride!" - Hunter S Thompson - RIP
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Wordle 482 4/6*
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Wordle 482 5/6
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Should have had at after 3rd clue, Grrr
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day"
Badfinger
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Decades ago MS added an "always on top" attribute you could give to a window your app creates so you could have a window that was always floating on top of everything else. If you dragged another window over that area, you could see the window being dragged slide "underneath" it rather than on top of it as you would otherwise ordinarily expect.
These days you rarely see apps using this attribute, but I don't believe there's anything in more recent versions of Windows to prevent you from using it.
For the past couple of years (and it's been this long before I decided to ask, just now) I've noticed a few apps that should never have this attribute, or at least have never presented any option to make it top-most, seemingly randomly get this attribute out of nowhere, and it stays that way until you close the app and restart it.
I have an old version of a news reader (as in Usenet) that does this every once in a while, and I've also seen remote desktop sessions do it also. Once the window somehow decides it's going to always be on top, I can't bring other windows in front. None of the apps I've seen exhibit this behavior have any option to turn this on or off, and I can't imagine any sort of criteria where code in an app might turn on the always-on-top attribute.
Am I speaking total non-sense, or has anyone else ever seen this?
[Edit]
I've done a quick google search, and while there are apps that apparently people use to make any app top-most, I absolutely, positively, have never downloaded such apps...and as far as I know there's no magic, secret key combination built into Windows to do that either.
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[Original]
Some of those window attributes could be tied into the window class which would make it immutable, but I have seen apps that allow it to be toggled.
On a hunch, I googled if there is a system hot key for this and some post mentions Ctrl + Spacebar as a toggle. Which is an oft used hot key in my IDEs.
I will have to try it later.
[Update follows]
It looks like window class was for old 32 bit API from another poster. Different poster has/had good good info on SetWindowPos(ition) API which is newer from Vista+.
I think the hot key was app specific, I could not get it to work with Notepad. (Notepad could still be win32?)
I put a newer post at the bottom with a better reference.
modified 15-Oct-22 13:57pm.
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I had a hook function that made that back in MFC times
Random behaviour can also be caused by a conflict : if two windows have the attribute set, which of them wins ?
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Yes, I have the technical understanding and have created such apps decades ago.
What I'm saying is that the attribute "randomly" gets applied to applications for no apparent reason, when said app had already been running for many minutes/hours/days.
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I have apps that run for weeks and have never seen that occur.
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For sure. There's no reason whatsoever an app should suddenly start doing this no matter how long it's been running for.
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I've actually created such an application!
It was WinForms and VB.NET I think, probably .NET 4.5 or something.
I may have used that attribute you mention, but I remember it not always working.
For my application is was absolutely necessary that it worked.
First off, this was an application for factory workers using a touch screen (no physical mouse or keyboard).
The app opened full screen and the only way to close it was by closing it with a button (not the default Windows buttons, because I disabled those).
The thing is, they needed an on-screen keyboard.
The Windows on-screen keyboard was too small and had to many options for these simple workers (who would no doubt use it to mess things up), so I rolled out my own.
Since I created a sort of "factory application" framework, which we were going to use for multiple forms and applications for different customers, it all had to be quite generic, as to be reusable.
And "make sure you design your forms so a keyboard could popup at any time" isn't very generic, so the keyboard had to float above all else.
If the keyboard disappeared for whatever reason, you got stuck because there was no way to input anything.
So I made it always on top (not the application, I think, but that specific form).
Things even worked in design-time.
Colleagues could add buttons and "widgets" to a form similar as to how you add columns to a DataGridView.
They'd all look the same and every form had a similar look and feel, even though it was all custom software with very different functionalities.
Probably one of the hardest things I've ever programmed.
After some hacks to get the keyboard always on top it worked wonderfully well.
They're still using it now, 10 years later.
It was fun to make too.
I could spend my free time on it and I got paid double hours.
That way, they kept development in-house and I could still work on my regular projects, while having fun with this and making extra money.
I even worked on it during Christmas.
A new manager called me in after Christmas and started asking about my relation with my parents.
I was like "It's good... Where are you going with this?"
"I see you worked during Christmas."
"Yeah, I spent half a day with family and after that I was just having fun and making money! "
Ah, good old times.
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The cynic in me would just reply "cool story, bro", but that was, in fact, a cool story.
I know exactly how to do it, but the mystery in this case is how on God's Green Earth are random application windows getting that attribute when they don't (shouldn't?) even have code to do so. Like bits are flipping around randomly for no reason. Only, once it gets set, it never gets removed - unless I restart the app...
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After I wrote all that even I was like TL;DR
dandy72 wrote: I know exactly how to do it, but the mystery in this case is how on God's Green Earth are random application windows getting that attribute when they don't (shouldn't?) even have code to do so. Like bits are flipping around randomly for no reason. Only, once it gets set, it never gets removed - unless I restart the app...
if (!alwaysOnTopSet)
{
_alwaysOnTopSet = Random.Next(10) == 0;
} I thought you knew exactly how to do this
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Smartass. Have a 5!
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There's been a big change in how UIs behave which is that previously the user had control and would not be interrupted by the OS, processes or notifications - the user always had focus.
Nowadays, the user is just seen as one process and that process can be interrupted, have notifications pop up over a cursor or mouse pointer and be interrupted at any time - the user has become the slave to the machine.
βThat which can be asserted without evidence, can be dismissed without evidence.β
β Christopher Hitchens
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Well that's arguably a good thing, since Windows is a multi-user OS. Even though you could also argue that since every user has his own desktop, he should still own it and other users running their own things at the same time should not have any influence on what gets shown on each user's screen...
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GuyThiebaut wrote: the user had control and would not be interrupted by the OS, processes or notifications I have been using tools that frequently created error reporting dialog windows consistently at the bottom of the window stack - it could even be obscured by its own main window! The dialogs were modal, blocking the application from execution, until by accident or luck moved other windows to discover that there was a new window down at the bottom demanding my attention and action.
It really was a pain in the lower part of the back. I hated it. If an application requires me to take an action for it to continue, it should call my attention to it, one way or the other. Equally bad is if the notification or error dialog pops up a large, centered window, immediately grabbing keyboard, mouse and other inputs in the middle of a word that I am typing, or the dragging of an object. There is a middle ground, e.g. a flashing icon in the taskbar. But I prefer a dialog on top that does not grab focus (and preferably not centered) to a window at the bottom of the window stack.
The ideal would be an option to put the window as the second one from the top, so that it won't obscure the one currently having focus, with the default/automatic placement algorithm ensuring that a significant part of it sticks out from under the currently active window.
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Here is an AutoHotKey script to toggle topmost. It may be able to disable the feature for you if you use AHK:
; possibly from http:
!`:: ;Alt `
WinGet, currentWindow, ID, A
WinGet, ExStyle, ExStyle, ahk_id %currentWindow%
if (ExStyle & 0x8) { ; 0x8 is WS_EX_TOPMOST.
Winset, AlwaysOnTop, off, ahk_id %currentWindow%
SplashImage,, x0 y0 b fs12, OFF always on top.
Sleep, 1500
SplashImage, Off
}
else {
WinSet, AlwaysOnTop, on, ahk_id %currentWindow%
SplashImage,,x0 y0 b fs12, ON always on top.
Sleep, 1500
SplashImage, Off
}
return
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