Getting HWND of current Process

If you're talking about getting a process handle, then it's not an HWND (which is a window handle), but a HANDLE (i.e., a kernel object handle); to retrieve a pseudo-handle relative to the current process, you can use GetCurrentProcess as the others explained.

On the other hand, if you want to obtain an HWND (a window handle) to the main window of your application, then you have to walk the existing windows with EnumWindows and to check their ownership with GetWindowThreadProcessId, comparing the returned process ID with the one returned by GetCurrentProcessId. Still, in this case you'd better to save your main window handle in a variable when you create it instead of doing all this mess.

Anyhow, keep always in mind that not all handles are the same: HANDLEs and HWNDs, in particular, are completely different beasts: the first ones are kernel handles (=handles to kernel-managed objects) and are manipulated with generic kernel-handles manipulation functions (DuplicateHandle, CloseHandle, ...), while the second ones are handles relative to the window manager, which is a completely different piece of the OS, and are manipulated with a different set of functions.

Actually, in theory an HWND may have the same "numeric" value of a HANDLE, but they would refer to completely different objects.


Get your console window

GetConsoleWindow();


"The return value is a handle to the window used by the console associated with the calling process or NULL if there is no such associated console."

https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/ms683175(v=vs.85).aspx

Get other windows

GetActiveWindow() might NOT be the answer, but it could be useful
"The return value is the handle to the active window attached to the calling thread's message queue. Otherwise, the return value is NULL." > msdn GetActiveWindow() docs

However, the graphical windows are not just popping up - so you should retrieve the handle from the place you/your app've created the window... e.g. CreateWindow() returns HWND handle so all you need is to save&retrieve it...


You are (incorrectly) assuming that a process has only a single HWND. This is not generally true, and therefore Windows can't offer an API to get it. A program could create two windows, and have two HWNDs as a result. OTOH, if your program creates only a single window, it can store that HWND in a global variable.