private void ResizeCustomControl(IntPtr hWnd, InteropUtil.RECT rect, params IntPtr[] buttons)
        {
            Util.Assume(buttons != null && buttons.Length > 0);

            hWnd.AssumeNonZero();

            var wndLoc = hWnd.GetWindowPlacement();

            wndLoc.Right = rect.right;
            hWnd.SetWindowPlacement(ref wndLoc);

            foreach (var hBtn in buttons)
            {
                int btnRight, btnWidth;

                m_calcPosMap[hBtn.GetDlgCtrlID()](this, rect.right, out btnRight, out btnWidth);

                PositionButton(hBtn, btnRight, btnWidth);
            }

            //see bug # 844
            //We clip hWnd to only draw in the rectangle around our custom buttons.
            //When we supply a custom dialog template to GetOpenFileName(), it adds
            //an extra HWND to the open file dialog, and then sticks all the controls
            //in the dialog //template inside the HWND. It then resizes the control
            //to stretch from the top of the open file dialog to the bottom of the
            //window, extending the bottom of the window large enough to include the
            //additional height of the dialog template. This ends up sticking our custom
            //buttons at the bottom of the window, which is what we want.
            //
            //However, the fact that the parent window extends from the top of the open
            //file dialog was causing some painting problems on Windows XP SP 3 systems.
            //Basically, because the window was covering the predefined controls on the
            //open file dialog, they were not getting painted. This results in a blank
            //window. I tried setting an extended WS_EX_TRANSPARENT style on the dialog,
            //but that didn't help.
            //
            //So, to fix the problem I setup a window region for the synthetic HWND.
            //This clips the drawing of the window to only within the region containing
            //the custom buttons, and thus avoids the problem.
            //
            //I'm not sure why this wasn't an issue on Vista.
            var hRgn = InteropUtil.CreateRectRgnIndirect(ref rect);

            try
            {
                if (hWnd.SetWindowRgn(hRgn, true) == 0)
                {
                    //setting the region failed, so we need to delete the region we created above.
                    hRgn.DeleteObject();
                }
            }
            catch
            {
                if (hRgn != IntPtr.Zero)
                {
                    hRgn.DeleteObject();
                }
            }
        }
        private void ResizeCustomControl(IntPtr hWnd)
        {
            if (hWnd == m_hWnd)
            {
                var hSelectButton = hWnd.AssumeNonZero().GetDlgItem(InteropUtil.ID_SELECT).AssumeNonZero();
                var hOkButton     = hWnd.AssumeNonZero().GetDlgItem(InteropUtil.ID_CUSTOM_CANCEL).AssumeNonZero();

                var hParent  = hWnd.GetParent().AssumeNonZero();
                var fileName = hParent.GetDlgItem(InteropUtil.ID_FileNameCombo).AssumeNonZero();

                /*var right = fileName.GetWindowPlacement().Right;
                 * var top = hSelectButton.GetWindowPlacement().Top;*/

                var rect       = new InteropUtil.RECT();
                var selectRect = hSelectButton.GetWindowPlacement();

                rect.top    = selectRect.Top;
                rect.bottom = selectRect.Bottom;
                rect.right  = fileName.GetWindowPlacement().Right;
                rect.left   = rect.right - (m_cancelWidth + m_buttonGap + m_selectWidth);

                ResizeCustomControl(hWnd, rect, hOkButton, hSelectButton);
            }
        }