I am trying to implement Google Chrome style tabs, in Windows 7, in a Delphi application.
The elements of this are:
- tabs may extend into the non-client area as they do in google chrome itself.
- draws properly on Vista and Windows 7 when glass is enabled
- tabs work just like google chrome, and look like google chrome, over glass.
I have found that the challenges I have to overcome are:
- How do I get a control (VCL control) to extend into the non-client area? (A good sample of a control that does this is the Ribbon control included in开发者_开发知识库 the VCL sources, but I haven't seen anybody else do it, and it takes some wicked hacking to get the Ribbon to function)
- How to draw bitmaps properly over glass? (DWM API). A related question already answers that aspect, here, this question was also asked by me.
I've just completed a pretty much complete implementation of Chrome Tabs for Delphi.
The features include:
- Fully configurable Look and Feel including gradients, transparencies and custom tab shapes
- Tabs can be painted in the title bar when using Aero
- Works on Vista glass
- Tab movement animation
- Tab transitional style effects (fade between colours and alpha levels)
- Drag and Drop within container and between containers
- Drag image displays tab and any TWinControl
- Smart tab resizing when user clicks close button
- Fluid tab resizing with minimum and maximum tab sizes
- Add tab button can be positioned on the left, right or floating right
- Full featured scrolling including auto scroll when dragging
- Smart tab content display hides/shows items depending on the tab width
- Owner draw any item
- Right to Left text
- Pinned tabs
- Tab spinners - both rendered and bitmap.
- Modified tabs with animated glow
- Tab images and overlay images
- Mouse over glow
- Lots of events
- Load/save look and feel and options to stream/file
- Generate look and feel/options Delphi code
You can download the source and a full demo/editor here: http://code.google.com/p/delphi-chrome-tabs/
You don't want a full glass window, but you will have to draw the tabs yourself as there isn't a control that I am aware of that will give you the exact look your looking for. If you use the GlassFrame properties of the current form, enable it and set the top to the height you will want for your tabs, drop a paintbox on this area and use GDI+ calls to draw your tabs manually. A good library that should work for this is available on the EDN (http://cc.embarcadero.com/Download.aspx?id=26950). Without using GDI+ you will be able to draw to the paint box, but black will become transparent. With GDI+ you can draw freely to the glass in any color. For example:
Source:
unit Unit6;
interface
uses
Windows, Messages, SysUtils, Variants, Classes, Graphics, Controls, Forms,
Dialogs, GdiPlusHelpers, GdiPlus, StdCtrls, ExtCtrls;
type
TForm6 = class(TForm)
pb1: TPaintBox;
procedure pb1Paint(Sender: TObject);
private
{ Private declarations }
public
{ Public declarations }
end;
var
Form6: TForm6;
implementation
{$R *.dfm}
procedure TForm6.pb1Paint(Sender: TObject);
var
Graphics : IGPGraphics;
Brush: IGPSolidBrush;
FontFamily: IGPFontFamily;
Font: IGPFont;
Point: TGPPointF;
Pen: IGPPen;
begin
Graphics := Pb1.ToGPGraphics;
Brush := TGPSolidBrush.Create(TGPColor.Create(255, 0, 0, 0));
FontFamily := TGPFontFamily.Create('Consolas');
Font := TGPFont.Create(FontFamily, 12, FontStyleRegular, UnitPoint);
Point.Initialize(1, 0);
Graphics.TextRenderingHint := TextRenderingHintAntiAlias;
Graphics.DrawString('GDI+ Black Text', Font, Point, Brush);
Pen := TGPPen.Create(TGPColor.Create(255, 0, 0, 0));
Graphics.DrawLine(Pen, 0, 0, 200, 100);
end;
end.
Form:
object Form6: TForm6
Left = 0
Top = 0
Caption = 'Form6'
ClientHeight = 282
ClientWidth = 418
Color = clBtnFace
Font.Charset = DEFAULT_CHARSET
Font.Color = clWindowText
Font.Height = -11
Font.Name = 'Tahoma'
Font.Style = []
GlassFrame.Enabled = True
GlassFrame.Top = 22
OldCreateOrder = False
PixelsPerInch = 96
TextHeight = 13
object pb1: TPaintBox
Left = 0
Top = 0
Width = 313
Height = 105
OnPaint = pb1Paint
end
end
EDIT Updated to anti-alias the text so it looks better.
Found much later, From Klever Components:
http://rmklever.com/?p=248
Painting in the caption of a glassy form explained here: http://delphihaven.wordpress.com/2010/04/22/setting-up-a-custom-title-bar-reprise/ Also you can look in to the sources of delphi's ribbon controls.
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