开发者

How to programmatically move Windows taskbar?

I'd like to know any sort of API or workaround (e.g., script or registry) to move (or resize) Windows taskbar to another position including another monitor (if dual monitors). Definitely, we can move task bar by using mouse, but I want to move it by a program, or a sort of automated way.

I tried to find Win32 API, but it seems no one does this job.

EDIT: I was surprised by many people's opinion. Let me explain why I wanted it. In my 开发者_开发百科workplace, I'm using dual monitors (resolutions are different), and the taskbar is placed on the left monitor while the primary monitor is the right monitor. However, I often connect to my workplace computer via remote desktop. After the remote connection, the taskbar position is switched. That's why I wanted to make a simple program that can save/restore taskbar's position. Everyday I have to rearrange my taskbar. That's it. I just want it for me.


I also have this need on Windows 7. Here is my take to do this using autohotkey script:

; This script will try to drag and move the taskbar to where the *current* mouse
; cursor is

; 0x111: WM_COMMAND, 424: lock/unlock taskbar, http://www.codeproject.com/KB/miscctrl/Taskbar_Manipulation.aspx
RegRead, TaskbarLocked, HKEY_CURRENT_USER, SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\Advanced, TaskbarSizeMove
If TaskbarLocked = 0
  SendMessage 0x111, 424, , , ahk_class Shell_TrayWnd   

WinActivate ahk_class Shell_TrayWnd
MouseGetPos targetX, targetY
ControlGetPos x, y, w, h, MSTaskListWClass1, ahk_class Shell_TrayWnd
MouseMove x+1, y+1
MouseClickDrag Left, x+1, y+1, targetX, targetY, 10

; often after dragging the taskbar to left or right side of a monitor, even though
; there are enough room to show two columns of icons, it will only show one column,
; it seems showing or hiding an icon will fix this
Menu, Tray, NoIcon
Menu, Tray, Icon

; lock the taskbar if it was previously locked
If TaskbarLocked = 0
  SendMessage 0x111, 424, , , ahk_class Shell_TrayWnd   

I have tested this on Windows 7 with classic window theme. To use this, assign a hotkey to call this script, then position mouse cursor to where you want to drag the taskbar to, then press the hotkey.


The taskbar is a window. Use SetWindowPos() to move it. See also SHAppBarMessage() and ABM_WINDOWPOSCHANGED.

Though the taskbar may be special and Windows may not like you moving it around. There are a lot of special cases in the Shell appbar API implementation for the taskbar.

To move to another monitor, use EnumDisplayMonitors() with GetMonitorInfo(). Some monitors may have negative coordinates.


I've had some luck with this task in an AutoHotkey script, just in case you don't care about the language used. It uses simulated keystrokes and mouse movements to move your taskbar. I stopped short of automatically unlocking/locking the taskbar.

The hard part was getting it to work reliably. A lot of the code is dedicated to making sure that the taskbar moved. It still doesn't work 100%... it fails like 10% of the time from what I've seen. However, it should be good enough to get you started!

If I ever come back to this script to make it work perfectly, I'll repost here.

Here is the example script (highlighting is a bit odd here, as the language is AHK):

F3::
    reload
return

F5::
    MoveTaskbar(2,"bottom")
return

F6::
    MoveTaskbar(2,"left")
return

F7::
    MoveTaskbar(1,"top")
return

; Move the taskbar
; dspNumber:    number.  device number (primary display is 1, secondary display is 2...)
; edge:         string.  Top, Right, Bottom, or Left
MoveTaskbar(dspNumber, edge)
{
    Critical 
    OutputDebug MoveTaskbar - called to move taskbar to display #%dspNumber% ("%edge%" edge)

    ; absolute coordinate system
    CoordMode, Mouse, Screen

    ; error checking for dspNumber
    SysGet, numMonitors, MonitorCount
    if (numMonitors<dspNumber)
    {
        OutputDebug MoveTaskbar - [ERROR] target monitor does not exist (dspNumber = "%dspNumber%")
        return
    }

    ; get screen position for target monitor
    SysGet, target, Monitor, %dspNumber%

    oX := 7
    oY := 7

    ; get coordinates for where to move the taskbar
    if (edge = "Top")
    {
        oX := (targetRight-targetLeft)/2
        trgX := oX+targetLeft
        trgY := targetTop+15
    }
    else if (edge = "Right")
    {
        oY := -(targetBottom-targetTop)/2
        trgX := targetRight-15
        trgY := -oY + targetTop
    }
    else if (edge = "Bottom")
    {
        oX := -(targetRight-targetLeft)/2
        trgX := -oX+targetLeft
        trgY := targetBottom-15
    }
    else if (edge = "Left")
    {
        oY := (targetBottom-targetTop)/2
        trgX := targetLeft+15
        trgY := oY+targetTop
    }
    else
    {
        OutputDebug MoveTaskbar - [ERROR] target edge was improperly specified (edge = "%edge%")
        return
    }
    trgX := round(trgX)
    trgY := round(trgY)
    oX := round(oX)
    oY := round(oY)

    OutputDebug MoveTaskbar - target location is (%trgX%,%trgY%)
    MouseGetPos, startX, startY
    OutputDebug MoveTaskbar - mouse is currently at (%startX%,%startY%)

    ; request the move mode (via context menu)
    SendInput #b
    SendInput !+{Space}
    SendInput m

    ; wait for the move mode to be ready
    Loop 
    {
        if A_Cursor = SizeAll
            break
    }
    OutputDebug MoveTaskbar - move mode is ready

    ; start the move mode
    SendInput {Right}   

    ; wait for the move mode to become active for mouse control
    Loop 
    {
        if A_Cursor = Arrow
            break
    }
    OutputDebug MoveTaskbar - move mode is active for mouse control

    ; move taskbar (and making sure it actually does move)
    offset := 7
    count := 0
    Loop
    {
        ; move the taskbar to the desired location
        OutputDebug MoveTaskbar - attempting to move mouse to (%trgX%,%trgY%)
        MouseMove, %trgX%, %trgY%, 0
        MouseGetPos, mX, mY, win_id
        WinGetClass, win_class, ahk_id %win_id%

        count += 1

        ; if the mouse didn't get where it was supposed to, try again
        If ((mX != trgX) or (mY != trgY))
        {
            OutputDebug MoveTaskbar - mouse didn't get to its destination (currently at (%mX%,%mY%)).  Trying the move again...
            continue
        }

        ; if the taskbar hasn't followed yet, wiggle the mouse!
        if (win_class != "Shell_TrayWnd")
        {
            OutputDebug MoveTaskbar - window with class "%win_class%" is under the mouse... wiggling the mouse until the taskbar gets over here

            ;offset := - offset
            trgX -= round(oX/2)
            trgY -= round(oY/2)
            oX := -oX
            oY := -oY
            if count = 50
            {
                OutputDebug, MoveTaskbar - wiggling isn't working, so I'm giving up.
                return
            }
        }
        else
            break
    }

    OutputDebug MoveTaskbar - taskbar successfully moved
    SendInput {Enter}
}


Thank you for asking this question!

Its Windows 10 now and i got the same kind of problem where i made a script to switch between a 2 screens setup and only the tv for movies. After switching back to the 2 screens setup, the taskbar is back on the right monitor, just like you experienced.

I found a solution involving modifying the registry key that defines the taskbar location.

This is the said key: HKEY_CURRENT_USER\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\StuckRects3

Open the regisrty editor while your taskbar is at the right spot and size (Win+R, type regedit", the enter), then navigate to the key path above. You should find a binary value named "Settings" that looks like this:

30 00 00 00 fe ff ff ff 02 00 00 00 03 00 00 00 4e 00 00 00 32 00 00 00 80 f8 ff ff b2 01 00 00 be f8 ff ff ea 05 00 00 60 00 00 00 01 00 00 00

Your numbers may vary, but it doesn't matter. Simply click on file>export action in the menu once you navigated to the value, then use the file->export option from the top menu, and and save the .reg file in your system forlder (C:\Windows\System32). Make sure the export range is set to "Selected Branch" so only this value is affected. This will create a registry script that will restore the exact position of your taskbar.

However, if you just use the "merge" option on your script, you won't see the change since you will need to restart the explorer.exe process. To achieve this, you can simply make a batch script in noptepad looking like this:

@echo off
%windir%\system32\regedit.exe /s file.reg
taskkill /f /im explorer.exe
start explorer.exe
end

Simply replace in the 2nd line the "file.reg" by the complete file name of the .reg script you previously created, then save the file as a ".bat".

Running this script as an admin will reset the taskbar to where it should be. You will see the ui flashing briefly, since the taskbar and desktop will reset.

You could call this script from a Task, or make a shortcut that is set to run as admin to make it even easier!

I hope this answer reaches you, even if is is a "little" late XD

Your Welcome!


As far as I can tell, Vista and onwards ignore any program trying to move the taskbar. The old method was ABM_SETPOS + MoveWindow, and this no longer works on the taskbar. The only way that I am aware of that still works is simulating a mouse move (click-move-release). I've read about that method, but I've never done it myself.


Here is a solution with PowerShell. My code is based on the solutions presented in the answers here:

2,3 | ForEach-Object {
    $local:regPath = "HKCU:\$(
        )SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\$(
            )CurrentVersion\Explorer\StuckRects$_"
    $s = Get-ItemProperty $regPath |
        Select-Object -ExpandProperty Settings
    $s[12] = 2
    Set-ItemProperty -Path $regPath -Name Settings -Value $s
}

# Restart the Explorer process so that registry is read again
Get-Process Explorer | Stop-Process
$local:stop = $false
do {
    Start-Sleep -Seconds 5
    $stop = Get-Process Explorer -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue
    if( $stop ) { continue }
    Write-Host -ForegroundColor Yellow "$(
        )Explorer hasn't auto-started, attempting to restart..."
    Start-Process Explorer
} until ( $stop )

The code will change to 2 (right-side) the 13th position of the Settings registry stream at the following keys:

HKCU:\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\StuckRects2
HKCU:\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\StuckRects3

Afterwards, it kills the explorer.exe process, waits around for 5 seconds and if explorer hasn't started again, it will start a new instance.


SHAppBarMessage(ABM_SETPOS,...)


In my experience the task bar on the left and right side clash unworkably with the rest of the experience. Even top has the problem that Preview appear outside the screen at the top.

For me this works in windows 11 to toggle task bar between top and bottom.

$RegistryPath =  'HKCU:\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\StuckRects3'
$Name = "Settings"

$NewValue = Get-ItemProperty -Path $RegistryPath
$NewValue.Settings[12] = 4-$NewValue.Settings[12]

Set-ItemProperty -Path $RegistryPath -Name $Name -Value $NewValue.Settings
Stop-Process -Name "Explorer"

Explorer is autmatically started when it is killed so there is no need to start it manually.

0

上一篇:

下一篇:

精彩评论

暂无评论...
验证码 换一张
取 消

最新问答

问答排行榜