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Home/ Questions/Q 1006659
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T08:29:44+00:00 2026-05-16T08:29:44+00:00

I just read this question and this question , and since then I have

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I just read this question and this question, and since then I have been trying to call SHGetSetSettings in Delphi. This is a function of shell32.dll, but is not defined in ShlObj.pas, so we need to write our own definition.

First we need to translate the SHELLSTATE structure. Now I have only limited experience in C, but I suppose that “: 1” means that the member of the structure is a single bit, that is, that eight of them can be packed together in a byte. I also suppose that DWORD = UINT = 32-bit unsigned integers and that LONG = int are 32-bit signed integers. But then we have a problem: The entire structure will then occupy 228 bits, or 28.5 bytes, which is … rather impossible, at least in Delphi, where sizeof(SomeRecord) has to be an integer.

Nevertheless, I tried to solve it by adding four dummy bits at the end. 232 bits = 29 bytes, which is nice.

Hence I tried

PShellState = ^TShellState;
TShellState = packed record
  Data1: cardinal;
  Data2: cardinal;
  Data3: cardinal;
  Data4: cardinal;
  Data5: cardinal;
  Data6: cardinal;
  Data7: cardinal;
  Data8: byte; // Actually a nibble would be sufficient
end;

and then I declared (for later convenience)

const
  fShowAllObjects = 1;
  fShowExtensions = 2;
  fNoConfirmRecycle = 4;
  fShowSysFiles = 8;
  fShowCompColor = 16;
  fDoubleClickInWebView = 32;
  fDesktopHTML = 64;
  fWin95Classic = 128;
  fDontPrettyPath = 256;
  fShowAttribCol = 512;
  fMapNetDrvButton = 1024;
  fShowInfoTip = 2048;
  fHideIcons = 4096;
  fWebView = 8192;
  fFilter = 16384;
  fShowSuperHidden = 32768;
  fNoNetCrawling = 65536;

Now I felt ready to define

interface
  procedure SHGetSetSettings(var ShellState: TShellState; Mask: cardinal; DoSet: boolean); stdcall;

implementation
  procedure SHGetSetSettings; external shell32 name 'SHGetSetSettings';

But before I tried the code, I noticed something very strange. I found that the constants I declared were already declared here: SSF Constants. Notice that SSF_HIDEICONS = 0x00004000 = 16384 ≠ fHideIcons = 4096. If the SSF_ constants really are masks used together with SHELLSTATE, then it makes no sense to define SSF_HIDEICONS as 2^14 when it is the 13th bit (and its mask should be 2^12) in the structure. Hence, it seems, the two MSDN reference pages contradict eachother.

Could someone please bring some clarity into all this?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T08:29:45+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 8:29 am

    My reading of the help here is that the SSF_ constants are specified for the mask when retrieving data. There’s no reason they have to map to the bits in the ShellState structure.

    If they did fShowSysFiles would map to 8 (0x04), and we know from the help that SSF_SHOWSYSFILES is 0x20. There’s no direct mapping.

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