I use DevExpress
I had difficulty managing. I have a GridControl and added cell navigation buttons. That's just the question, how can you implement this code?
There are 4 buttons, among which are: First entry (|<), Previous entry (<), Next entry (>), Last entry (>|). How can you programmatically write these cell movements?
An example of an Access screen, such as this navigation:
My suggestion would be to not write it yourself... use the Dev Express embedded navigator.
If you go to designer view on the grid, go to Feature Browser, Focus, Embedded Navigator and set the UseEmbeddedNavigator property to true.
You can, of course, also do this in the regular property window of your form.
Once you do that, your grid will have it:
Related
I am working on a project in which I am using a property grid to display the properties of the selected control.
The Property Grid is fixed to the left edge of the container and in the rest of the space I have the form I am designing.
On clicking a control on the form, the specific control’s property is getting selected.
In the above figure, I have selected the textbox and the textbox’s properties get shown on the propertygrid.
Here if you observe, by default, the Name property is highlighted as well.
Is there some way to unselect this property programmatically?
I have tried some suggestions online but none have helped. I am not able to find find a way to remove all selections from the PropertyGrid, but its behaviour seem to be different form a DataGrid...
Here is why I need this...
On selecting a control, if a property in the property grid is selected, then the property is getting modified.
For example, If i cut the control using Ctrl + X, the selected value in property grid is getting cut which in some cases is forcing user to set the property before modifying anything on the form.
I have tried selecting multiple controls, but in that case alse the selected property seems to be persistent
Since PropertyGrid uses DefaultProperty to select a property in its grid, as an option you can set DefaultProperty attribute at run-time for your object to a non-browsable property, for example:
this.propertyGrid1.SelectedObject = null;
TypeDescriptor.AddAttributes(someControl,
new Attribute[] { new DefaultPropertyAttribute("Site") });
this.propertyGrid1.SelectedObject = someControl;
Well, what you are trying are hacks. It is never a good idea to do such hacks particularly if you are not the only person that use the software.
In your case, the focus should be on the designer while you interact with it. So if the user press Ctrl+X, the designer should respond to the keyboard and it should not have any effect on the property grid (as only one control can have the focus at the same time).
Thus it is up to you to make sure that your designer is focusable, that it has the focus when initially displayed, that it get the focus when you press the TAB key. Pressing the TAB key again should put the focus on the property grid so that user can interact with the grid without using the keyboard.
If you have more than these 2 controls, then obviously TAB should also stop at any appropriate controls. Also, it can be a good idea to have some direct shortcuts like F4 to (show and) activate the properties pane.
If you are not able to make it works, then the best compromise would be to use another windows for the properties grid. By using a distinct Tool windows for the properties, it should not respond to the keyboard when the main windows has the focus.
Here are some links that might help you:
Panel not getting focus
Control.Focus Method() — See Remarks section.
In any case, you should not prevent Ctrl+X to works as expected when the property grid has the focus and a property is selected. Users don't like software that do not follows UI conventions.
As a software developer, you should as much as possible ensure that your application follows standard behaviors. I recommend you that you take one or 2 extra days developing your software properly instead of doing hacks.
Often, compromise to gain a few days will never be fix and will be a pain for many years. Better to do it right from the start. Unselecting an item in the property grid is not an acceptable workaround. Your manager should not allows you to do that.
I'm styling WPF's Calendar control and I've reached a point in XAML where there's a grid with no elements in it, just divided by rows and columns where the day numbers are.
I've snooped and decompiled (void PopulateGrids()) and have learned that in code-behind the Calendar is creating CalendarDayButton and feeding it to the grid.
I need to change the style/theme in-order to change the colors (of those CalendarDayButton) and I'm not sure how to do that.
I've tried applying a style to all CalendarDayButton in said grid, but that didn't work.
Any suggestions?
P.S. I'd rather stay away from code-behind because what I'm working on is a style in a resource-dictionary and not a user-control.
Go to the Microsoft page for Calendar Styles and Templates, copy the style code into your resources block and make changes as needed. If you need to create additional properties for settings etc then you can do so with an attached property, that way you don't need to create a new calandar control. If you're having difficulty figuring out which parts of the template correspond to things you're seeing on-screen then put a breakpoint in your code somewhere, add the calandar control variable name to your watch window and click on the little magnifying glass to bring up the WPF visualizer...that will let you traverse the visual tree and visually see which part of the control each section is rendering.
I have a user control that contains multiple controls (CheckBox, Button, Label...).
I want to change the layout of this user control to support right to left languages but i can't find how to do it.
Currently i can change the controls alignement using the RightToLeft property. But how can i change their positions?
Thank you for your time.
Thank you guys for your answers but there is a better way to do it.
First we go to the user control properties and select the language property.
After changing it to another language a new resource file will be created for the user control.
After that, using the designer we can change the controls positions in the user control as we like.
The new values will be saved in the created resource file.
When the language has changed, the corresponding resource file will be loaded and the positions will be changed.
If the language is a right to left one, don't forget to specify the right to left property for the controls.
Hope this helps.
Use the layout controls with the RightToLeft property and follow the following links for implementation:
RightToLeft property in Form in C#
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.windows.forms.form.righttoleftlayout(vs.80).aspx:
Developing Arabic applications should be easy!
Implementing Mirror-Aware Controls for Windows Application with Visual Studio .NET
Try to use FlowLayoutPanel or TableLayoutPanel to hold your controls and change panels RightToLeft property
User control mirroring is not supported for user controls, see this connect article: http://connect.microsoft.com/VisualStudio/feedback/details/121202/usercontrol-mirroring-is-not-inherited-from-the-form
Their suggested workaround is to use a table layout panel which will mirror the controls in right to left.
I'm working on a custom user control that essentially displays a name value pair (name is on a black background, value on a white). I have my control displaying correctly, even showing up in Designer and on my build page.
What I'd like to do from here is have the ability to right click on the user control and have a menu come up that has a "Copy Value" option, that when selected will copy the value in the "value" part of the user control to the clipboard. What is the best method of approach?
I'm not sure where to start since most of the documentation on user controls I've found deals with displaying the control, not necessarily interacting with it. Additionally, since I'm still learning C#, I might have left out an important part of my problem in this question, so please point that out if it's the case.
I'm using Visual Studio 2008 (if that matters).
Examine the ContextMenu control and the ContextMenu property of other controls. By assigning a ContextMenu control to the ContextMeny property of another control, you will have the right-click->popup menu wiring done for you. Then you only need to implement the click event of the different menu items in the context menu.
Then you can use the Clipboard.SetText (as suggested by BFree) to set the desired value to the clipboard.
Add a ContextMenu to the control. The, hook into the MouseClick (or MouseDown, whichever works better) event and if it's a Right-Click, then call show on the ContextMenu (there are a few overloads, try to mess with them see which works best for you). Then, in the click event of your context menu, just call Clipboard.SetText(...) to set the value to the clipboard.
I'm trying to create a DataGridView cell class which hosts a control (all the time, not just while editing). So far, my approach has been to add the control to the grid and try to synchronise its position with that of the cell.
Would it be possible instead to keep the cell offscreen, route mouse and keyboard events to it, and paint it onto the cell?
UPDATE: By 'offscreen', I don't mean that it should be added to another control such that it isn't displayed; I mean that it should never be added to another control at all.
You can create a control without adding it to the form, then using it as the Cell editor whenever you need to. Usually with grids, when you click on a cell to edit it, it's going to either create a new control and put it in the right place, or it's going to use an existing control. You can make this process a lot easier by creating your own custom cell / column types. See this MSDN page: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/7fb61s43.aspx.
Most grids (including DataGridView and 3rd Party Grids) have a facility for adding custom cells.