TreeWalker.ContentViewWalker Champ

Définition

Représente un TreeWalker prédéfini contenant un affichage des éléments de l'arborescence qui sont marqués comme étant des contrôles de contenu.

public: static initonly System::Windows::Automation::TreeWalker ^ ContentViewWalker;
public static readonly System.Windows.Automation.TreeWalker ContentViewWalker;
 staticval mutable ContentViewWalker : System.Windows.Automation.TreeWalker
Public Shared ReadOnly ContentViewWalker As TreeWalker 

Valeur de champ

Exemples

L’exemple suivant montre ControlViewWalker comment être utilisé pour construire une arborescence d’éléments dans une sous-arborescence. L’utilisation de ContentViewWalker est identique.

/// <summary>
/// Walks the UI Automation tree and adds the control type of each element it finds 
/// in the control view to a TreeView.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="rootElement">The root of the search on this iteration.</param>
/// <param name="treeNode">The node in the TreeView for this iteration.</param>
/// <remarks>
/// This is a recursive function that maps out the structure of the subtree beginning at the
/// UI Automation element passed in as rootElement on the first call. This could be, for example,
/// an application window.
/// CAUTION: Do not pass in AutomationElement.RootElement. Attempting to map out the entire subtree of
/// the desktop could take a very long time and even lead to a stack overflow.
/// </remarks>
private void WalkControlElements(AutomationElement rootElement, TreeNode treeNode)
{
    // Conditions for the basic views of the subtree (content, control, and raw) 
    // are available as fields of TreeWalker, and one of these is used in the 
    // following code.
    AutomationElement elementNode = TreeWalker.ControlViewWalker.GetFirstChild(rootElement);

    while (elementNode != null)
    {
        TreeNode childTreeNode = treeNode.Nodes.Add(elementNode.Current.ControlType.LocalizedControlType);
        WalkControlElements(elementNode, childTreeNode);
        elementNode = TreeWalker.ControlViewWalker.GetNextSibling(elementNode);
    }
}
''' <summary>
''' Walks the UI Automation tree and adds the control type of each element it finds 
''' in the control view to a TreeView.
''' </summary>
''' <param name="rootElement">The root of the search on this iteration.</param>
''' <param name="treeNode">The node in the TreeView for this iteration.</param>
''' <remarks>
''' This is a recursive function that maps out the structure of the subtree beginning at the
''' UI Automation element passed in as rootElement on the first call. This could be, for example,
''' an application window.
''' CAUTION: Do not pass in AutomationElement.RootElement. Attempting to map out the entire subtree of
''' the desktop could take a very long time and even lead to a stack overflow.
''' </remarks>
Private Sub WalkControlElements(ByVal rootElement As AutomationElement, ByVal treeNode As TreeNode)
    ' Conditions for the basic views of the subtree (content, control, and raw) 
    ' are available as fields of TreeWalker, and one of these is used in the 
    ' following code.
    Dim elementNode As AutomationElement = TreeWalker.ControlViewWalker.GetFirstChild(rootElement)

    While (elementNode IsNot Nothing)
        Dim childTreeNode As TreeNode = treeNode.Nodes.Add(elementNode.Current.ControlType.LocalizedControlType)
        WalkControlElements(elementNode, childTreeNode)
        elementNode = TreeWalker.ControlViewWalker.GetNextSibling(elementNode)
    End While

End Sub

Remarques

Si votre application cliente peut essayer de trouver des éléments dans sa propre interface utilisateur, vous devez effectuer tous les appels UI Automation sur un thread distinct.

S’applique à

Voir aussi