How to: Call a Windows Function that Takes Unsigned Types (Visual Basic)
If you are consuming a class, module, or structure that has members of unsigned integer types, you can access these members with Visual Basic.
To call a Windows function that takes an unsigned type
Use a Declare Statement to tell Visual Basic which library holds the function, what its name is in that library, what its calling sequence is, and how to convert strings when calling it.
In the Declare statement, use UInteger, ULong, UShort, or Byte as appropriate for each parameter with an unsigned type.
Consult the documentation for the Windows function you are calling to find the names and values of the constants it uses. Many of these are defined in the WinUser.h file.
Declare the necessary constants in your code. Many Windows constants are 32-bit unsigned values, and you should declare these AsUInteger.
Call the function in the normal way. The following example calls the Windows function MessageBox, which takes an unsigned integer argument.
Public Class windowsMessage Private Declare Auto Function mb Lib "user32.dll" Alias "MessageBox" ( ByVal hWnd As Integer, ByVal lpText As String, ByVal lpCaption As String, ByVal uType As UInteger) As Integer Private Const MB_OK As UInteger = 0 Private Const MB_ICONEXCLAMATION As UInteger = &H30 Private Const IDOK As UInteger = 1 Private Const IDCLOSE As UInteger = 8 Private Const c As UInteger = MB_OK Or MB_ICONEXCLAMATION Public Function messageThroughWindows() As String Dim r As Integer = mb(0, "Click OK if you see this!", "Windows API call", c) Dim s As String = "Windows API MessageBox returned " & CStr(r)& vbCrLf & "(IDOK = " & CStr(IDOK) & ", IDCLOSE = " & CStr(IDCLOSE) & ")" Return s End Function End Class
You can test the function messageThroughWindows with the following code.
Public Sub consumeWindowsMessage() Dim w As New windowsMessage w.messageThroughWindows() End Sub
Warning
The UInteger, ULong, UShort, and SByte data types are not part of the Language Independence and Language-Independent Components (CLS), so CLS-compliant code cannot consume a component that uses them.
Security Note Making a call to unmanaged code, such as the Windows application programming interface (API), exposes your code to potential security risks.
Security Note Calling the Windows API requires unmanaged code permission, which might affect its execution in partial-trust situations. For more information, see SecurityPermission and Code Access Permissions.
See Also
Tasks
Walkthrough: Calling Windows APIs (Visual Basic)
Reference
Data Type Summary (Visual Basic)