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GetConsoleMode info  Overview  Group

The GetConsoleMode function reports the current input mode of a console’s input buffer or the current output mode of a console screen buffer.

BOOL GetConsoleMode(

    HANDLE hConsoleHandle,

// handle of console input or screen buffer

    LPDWORD lpMode 

// current mode flags

   );

Parameters

hConsoleHandle
Identifies a console input buffer or a screen buffer. The handle must have GENERIC_READ access.
lpMode
Points to a 32-bit variable that indicates the current mode of the specified buffer.

If the hConsoleHandle parameter is an input handle, the mode can be a combination of the following values. When a console is created, all input modes except ENABLE_WINDOW_INPUT are enabled by default.

Value

Meaning

ENABLE_LINE_INPUT

The ReadFile or ReadConsole function returns only when a carriage return character is read. If this mode is disabled, the functions return when one or more characters are available.

ENABLE_ECHO_INPUT

Characters read by the ReadFile or ReadConsole function are written to the active screen buffer as they are read. This mode can be used only if the ENABLE_LINE_INPUT mode is also enabled.

ENABLE_PROCESSED_INPUT

CTRL+C is processed by the system and is not placed in the input buffer. If the input buffer is being read by ReadFile or ReadConsole, other control keys are processed by the system and are not returned in the ReadFile or ReadConsole buffer. If the ENABLE_LINE_INPUT mode is also enabled, backspace, carriage return, and linefeed characters are handled by the system.

ENABLE_WINDOW_INPUT

User interactions that change the size of the console screen buffer are reported in the console’s input buffer. Information about these events can be read from the input buffer by applications using the ReadConsoleInput function, but not by those using ReadFile or ReadConsole.

ENABLE_MOUSE_INPUT

If the mouse pointer is within the borders of the console window and the window has the keyboard focus, mouse events generated by mouse movement and button presses are placed in the input buffer. These events are discarded by ReadFile or ReadConsole, even when this mode is enabled.

If the hConsoleHandle parameter is a screen buffer handle, the mode can be a combination of the following values. When a screen buffer is created, both output modes are enabled by default.

Value

Meaning

ENABLE_PROCESSED_OUTPUT

Characters written by the WriteFile or WriteConsole function or echoed by the ReadFile or ReadConsole function are parsed for ASCII control sequences, and the correct action is performed. Backspace, tab, bell, carriage return, and linefeed characters are processed.

ENABLE_WRAP_AT_EOL_OUTPUT

When writing with WriteFile or WriteConsole or echoing with ReadFile or ReadConsole, the cursor moves to the beginning of the next row when it reaches the end of the current row. This causes the rows displayed in the console window to scroll up automatically when the cursor advances beyond the last row in the window. It also causes the contents of the screen buffer to scroll up (discarding the top row of the screen buffer) when the cursor advances beyond the last row in the screen buffer. If this mode is disabled, the last character in the row is overwritten with any subsequent characters.

Return Values

If the function succeeds, the return value is nonzero.

If the function fails, the return value is zero. To get extended error information, call GetLastError.

Remarks

A console consists of an input buffer and one or more screen buffers. The mode of a console buffer determines how the console behaves during input or output (I/O) operations. One set of flag constants is used with input handles, and another set is used with screen buffer (output) handles. Setting the output modes of one screen buffer does not affect the output modes of other screen buffers.

The ENABLE_LINE_INPUT and ENABLE_ECHO_INPUT modes only affect processes that use ReadFile or ReadConsole to read from the console’s input buffer. Similarly, the ENABLE_PROCESSED_INPUT mode primarily affects ReadFile and ReadConsole users, except that it also determines whether CTRL+C input is reported in the input buffer (to be read by the ReadConsoleInput function) or is passed to a function defined by the application.

The ENABLE_WINDOW_INPUT and ENABLE_MOUSE_INPUT modes determine whether user interactions involving window resizing and mouse actions are reported in the input buffer or discarded. These events can be read by ReadConsoleInput, but they are always filtered by ReadFile and ReadConsole.

The ENABLE_PROCESSED_OUTPUT and ENABLE_WRAP_AT_EOL_OUTPUT modes only affect processes using ReadFile or ReadConsole and WriteFile or WriteConsole.

To change a console’s I/O modes, call SetConsoleMode function.

See Also

ReadConsole, ReadConsoleInput, ReadFile, SetConsoleMode, WriteConsole, WriteFile