Scrolling origins
An action with the mouse wheel results in a WM_MOUSEWHEEL
message being sent:
Sent to the focus window when the mouse wheel is rotated. The DefWindowProc function propagates the message to the window's parent. There should be no internal forwarding of the message, since DefWindowProc propagates it up the parent chain until it finds a window that processes it.
A mouse wheel's odyssey 1)
- The user scrolls the mouse wheel.
- The system places a
WM_MOUSEWHEEL
message into the foreground window’s thread’s message queue.
- The thread’s message loop fetches the message from the queue (
Application.ProcessMessage
). This message is of type TMsg
which has a hwnd
member designating the window handle the message is ment for.
- The
Application.OnMessage
event is fired.
- Setting the
Handled
parameter True
stops further processing of the message (except for the next to steps).
- The
Application.IsPreProcessMessage
method is called.
- If no control has captured the mouse, the focused control's
PreProcessMessage
method is called, which does nothing by default. No control in the VCL has overriden this method.
- The
Application.IsHintMsg
method is called.
- The active hint window handles the message in an overriden
IsHintMsg
method. Preventing the message from further processing is not possible.
DispatchMessage
is called.
- The
TWinControl.WndProc
method of the focused window receives the message. This message is of type TMessage
which lacks the window (because that is the instance this method is called upon).
- The
TWinControl.IsControlMouseMsg
method is called to check whether the mouse message should be directed to one of its non-windowed child controls.
- If there is a child control that has captured the mouse or is at the current mouse position2), then the message is sent to the child control's
WndProc
method, see step 10. (2) This will never happen, because WM_MOUSEWHEEL
contains its mouse position in screen coordinates and IsControlMouseMsg
assumes a mouse position in client coordinates (XE2).)
- The inherited
TControl.WndProc
method receives the message.
- When the system does not natively supports mouse wheel (< Win98 or < WinNT4.0), the message is converted to a
CM_MOUSEWHEEL
message and is send to TControl.MouseWheelHandler
, see step 13.
- Otherwise the message is dispatched to the appropriate message handler.
- The
TControl.WMMouseWheel
method receives the message.
- The
WM_MOUSEWHEEL
window message (meaningful to the system and often to the VCL too) is converted to a CM_MOUSEWHEEL
control message (meaningful only to the VCL) which provides for the convenient VCL's ShiftState
information instead of the system's keys data.
- The control's
MouseWheelHandler
method is called.
- If the control is a
TCustomForm
, then the TCustomForm.MouseWheelHandler
method is called.
- If there is a focused control on it, then
CM_MOUSEWHEEL
is sent to the focused control, see step 14.
- Otherwise the inherited method is called, see step 13.2.
- Otherwise the
TControl.MouseWheelHandler
method is called.
- If there is a control that has captured the mouse and has no parent3), then the message is sent to that control, see step 8 or 10, depending on the type of the control. (3) This will never happen, because
Capture
is gotten with GetCaptureControl
, which checks for Parent <> nil
(XE2).)
- If the control is on a form, then the control's form's
MouseWheelHandler
is called, see step 13.1.
- Otherwise, or if the control ís the form, then
CM_MOUSEWHEEL
is sent to the control, see step 14.
- The
TControl.CMMouseWheel
method receives the message.
- The
TControl.DoMouseWheel
method is called.
- The
OnMouseWheel
event is fired.
- If not handled, then
TControl.DoMouseWheelDown
or TControl.DoMouseWheelUp
is called, depending on the scroll direction.
- The
OnMouseWheelDown
or the OnMouseWheelUp
event is fired.
- If not handled, then
CM_MOUSEWHEEL
is sent to the parent control, see step 14. (I believe this is against the advice given by MSDN in the quote above, but that undoubtedly is a thoughtful decision made by the developers. Possibly because that would start this very chain al over.)
Remarks, observations and considerations
At almost every step in this chain of processing the message can be ignored by doing nothing, altered by changing the message parameters, handled by acting on it, and canceled by setting Handled := True
or setting Message.Result
to non-zero.
Only when some control has focus, this message is received by the application. But even when Screen.ActiveCustomForm.ActiveControl
is forcefully set to nil
, the VCL ensures a focused control with TCustomForm.SetWindowFocus
, which defaults to the previously active form. (With Windows.SetFocus(0)
, indeed the message is never sent.)
Due to the bug in IsControlMouseMsg
2), a TControl
can only receive the WM_MOUSEWHEEL
message if it has captured the mouse. This can manually be achieved by setting Control.MouseCapture := True
, but you have to take special care of releasing that capture expeditiously, otherwise it will have unwanted side effects like the need for an unnecessary extra click to get something done. Besides, mouse capture typically only takes place between a mouse down and a mouse up event, but this restriction does not necessarily have to be applied. But even when the message reaches the control, it is sent to its MouseWheelHandler
method which just sends it back to either the form or the active control. Thus non-windowed VCL controls can never act on the message by default. I believe this is another bug, otherwise why would all wheel handling have been implemented in TControl
? Component writers may have implemented their own MouseWheelHandler
method for this very purpose, and whatever solution comes to this question, there has to be taken care of not breaking this kind of existing customization.
Native controls which are capable of scrolling with the wheel, like TMemo
, TListBox
, TDateTimePicker
, TComboBox
, TTreeView
, TListView
, etc. are scrolled by the system itself. Sending CM_MOUSEWHEEL
to such a control has no effect by default. These subclassed controls scroll as a result of the WM_MOUSEWHEEL
message sent to the with the subclass associated API window procedure with CallWindowProc
, which the VCL takes care of in TWinControl.DefaultHandler
. Oddly enough, this routine does not check Message.Result
before calling CallWindowProc
, and once the message is sent, scrolling cannot be prevented. The message comes back with its Result
set depending on whether the control normally is capable of scrolling or on the type of control. (E.g. a TMemo
returns <> 0
, and TEdit
returns 0
.) Whether it actually scrolled has no influence on the message result.
VCL controls rely on the default handling as implemented in TControl
and TWinControl
, as layed out above. They act on wheel events in DoMouseWheel
, DoMouseWheelDown
or DoMouseWheelUp
. For as far I know, no control in the VCL has overriden MouseWheelHandler
in order to handle wheel events.
Looking at different applications, there seems to be no conformity on which wheel scroll behaviour is the standard. For example: MS Word scrolls the page that is hovered, MS Excel scrolls the workbook that is focused, Windows Eplorer scrolls the focused pane, websites implement scroll behaviour each very differently, Evernote scrolls the window that is hovered, etc... And Delphi's own IDE tops everything by scrolling the focused window as well as the hovered window, except when hovering the code editor, then the code editor steals focus when you scroll (XE2).
Luckily Microsoft offers at least user experience guidelines for Windows-based desktop applications:
- Make the mouse wheel affect the control, pane, or window that the pointer is currently over. Doing so avoids unintended results.
- Make the mouse wheel take effect without clicking or having input focus. Hovering is sufficient.
- Make the mouse wheel affect the object with the most specific scope. For example, if the pointer is over a scrollable list box control in a scrollable pane within a scrollable window, the mouse wheel affects the list box control.
- Don't change the input focus when using the mouse wheel.
So the question's requirement to only scroll the hovered control has enough grounds, but Delphi's developers haven't made it easy to implement it.
Conclusion and solution
The preferred solution is one without subclassing windows or multiple implementations for different forms or controls.
To prevent the focused control from scrolling, the control may not receive the CM_MOUSEWHEEL
message. Therefore, MouseWheelHandler
of any control may not be called. Therefore, WM_MOUSEWHEEL
may not be send to any control. Thus the only place left for intervention is TApplication.OnMessage
. Furthermore, the message may not escape from it, so all handling should take place in that event handler and when all default VCL wheel handling is bypassed, every possible condition is to be taken care of.
Let's start simple. The enabled window which currently is hovered is gotten with WindowFromPoint
.
procedure