The Wiert Corner – irregular stream of stuff

Jeroen W. Pluimers on .NET, C#, Delphi, databases, and personal interests

  • My badges

  • Twitter Updates

  • My Flickr Stream

  • Pages

  • All categories

  • Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

    Join 1,860 other subscribers

Q145994: HOWTO: Calculate Dialog Units When Not Using the System Font | KnowledgeBase Archive

Posted by jpluimers on 2025/07/17

It is odd that Microsoft now verifies to an external party because most of the Microsoft KB articles got deleted: [Wayback/Archive] Q145994: HOWTO: Calculate Dialog Units When Not Using the System Font | KnowledgeBase Archive.

Part of them document aspects from Microsoft Foundation Class Library – Wikipedia which is still supported.

Via: [Wayback/Archive] How does the dialog manager calculate the average width of a character? – The Old New Thing:

Some time ago, I explained that the Map­Dialog­Rect function requires the handle to a dialog box because the mapping from dialog units to pixels is dependent upon the default font of the dialog box, so you need to know which dialog box you are converting.

I noted that if you don’t have a dialog box, and you don’t want to find or make one, then you can simulate the calculations yourself using the standard formulas:

8 vertical dlu =  1 character tall
4 horizontal dlu =  1 average character wide

According to Knowledge Base article Q145994, the calculation of the character height and width are performed as follows:

For height, call GetTextMetrics and use the tmHeight.

For average width, get the text extent of the string

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz

and divide it by 52, rounding to the nearest integer. Do not use the tmAveCharWidth from the text metrics. Despite its name, it is not the average of anything. It’s just the width of the character x.

Bonus chatter: Maybe the font people interpreted it to mean “the width of an average character”, rather than “the average width of a character.”

Related:

–jeroen

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.