is there a simple way to set the tooltip property of a listview item to be a balloon? Typically all i would do is:
Tooltip tt = new Tooltip("This is a tooltip");
tt.isBalloon = true;
but how do i do this for a listview item
You can manually show ToolTip when mouse is over certain item
check this article
There isn't an easy way to change the tooltip on a ListView. See this blog for a detailed explanation of why.
ObjectListView -- an open source wrapper around a standard WinForms ListView -- does a reasonable amount of work for you so that you can show enhanced tool tips with minimal effort on your part.
Even if you don't want to use ObjectListView, you can still look at the code to see how it is done (admittedly, in the case of tool tips, there was a lot of work done and it would be tricky to extract that work into another project)
Related
Sorry but I am a newbie to WPF, I would really appreciate if you could help me-
Tag 1 in pic- Which control can I use to create a menu similar to that in the picture ? The closest I came was using a gridview within a listview but that ends up using a header for the gridview. Normal listview just highlights the entire strip and doesn't look good at all.
Tag 2 in pic // (No longer relevant, sorry)
Edit:
Looking for something simple like when using gridview with listview (as in pic below) there is automatically that standard window gradient & bevel effect etc. (As an idea, implementing it with buttons seems to cumbersome, first strip button border, then create all these effects.) So essentially anything already inbuilt in WPF.
Thanks for any help :-D !!!
ListBox or ListView are good controls to use. If it's just the 'pretty' factor you don't like, you can provide Templates to change the appearance. But functionally, ListBox and ListView provide the function of that menu.
When working with WPF, that should be your primary motivation when choose controls. What FUNCTIONS the way you want. You can always make it LOOK different with Templates, but getting the right FUNCTION is the primary goal for the control.
I'm pretty new to c#, the first thing that I'm trying to make is a ListView with data bindings which has turned out ok.
I'm now trying to make items have a twist button if the underlying model has any children (like the TreeView). Each of the children will have columns the same as all the top level items.
How would I go about doing this? Is there an already existing control like this? If not would I be better off dressing up a TreeView to look like a ListView, or dress up a ListView to look like a TreeView?
I went down the road outlined in this solution which dresses up a TreeView, but the end result looks pretty awful and the heading is actually just an item, so you lose all the nice column sizing and column buttons that can hook up to column sorting that you get in ListView so that route actually seems like it would be more work.
I noticed the new task manager has a control exactly like what I'm trying to create, I don't know how this made? probably in C though.
Microsoft provides a sample that appears to be what you are looking for. A write-up of the example can be found here:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/vstudio/ms771523(v=vs.90).aspx
When you build and run the example you will end up with something resembling this:
There is a large amount of templating done in the example, so you will be able to make things look the way you want.
What you describe sounds a bit like a TreeListView, and if you google 'WPF TreeListView' you will see some solutions that might be good for you. I have used one from Telerik, but it might be overkill depending on how complicated your needs are.
If you only want one sub-level like the image you attached, you might want to just roll your own using a ListView with a complex DataTemplate for the first column which would show an expander button and a simple ListBox bound to the children items.
Similar to the answer here, except your cell would have a checkbox styled to look like the arrow, the text for the item, and a child ListBox. Then bind the visibility of the child ListBox to the state of the checkbox.
I've just started developing in Silverlight, and I have a calendar control which shows details for each day.
The text within the calendar is held within lots of textblocks, for some browsers the text size might be too big, so I want to have a slider control on the 'usercontrol' which allows the user to adjust the font size.
I'm building the calendar through c# code, so my question is.. what is the best way to 'wire' this up. I'm guessing it would be one of these options.
Add an event to the slider control for ValueChanged, then iterate through all TextBlocks setting the fontsize to the new size. This seems long-winded.
Maybe using a 'Style', which is attached to each TextBlock, then just changing the FontSize of the 'Style'.. ?? maybe ?
Using 'binding' & 'Dependancy Property'. I've looked into this, and it seems to be the way to do it, but I can't find an example where you're passing a value from one control to multiple other ones. Maybe I'm missing something.
I can do option 1 quite easily, but I want to learn about alternative methods of doing this.
Thanks
Rich.
A way to handle this is to not use fixed sizes but to size everything to its content. that way the control will get bigger when a larger font size is selected. Just like the TextBlock.
I've actually got this working now using option 3 which I'm happy with, it was very simple, but there seemed to be little documentation on it (maybe I was searching for the wrong thing).
It was as simple as adding a few lines...
Binding bind = new Binding("Value");
bind.Source = FontSlider;
The for every control that I want to apply the FontSlider's 'Value' to.. I do this...
MyTextBlock.SetBinding(TextBlock.FontSizeProperty,bind);
Simples.
Cheers
Rich.
I'm trying to have a grid that has items that have a custom layout/feel. If you have a look at the following http://mdavey.files.wordpress.com/2007/05/ldmain.jpg this is kinda what I am trying to do (see the aqua/red pods on the left and the graphs on the bottom right).
Under WPF/ASP.Net I would know how to do this but in WinForms I have no idea (I have never had to work on a WinForms app before). Like in WPF I would use Data Templates.
Hence I was wondering anyone knows of any good resources that goes through this or if anyone knows if its just as easy as creating a custom control, they having a grid that has one column and setting the type of that column to the custom control and then binding the data source to the grid???
Cheers Anthony
You may check Essential Grid - it seems to me it supports features you need.
There is an example for progress bar cell which you could use for the graphs on the right side:
http://www.syncfusion.com/products/user-interface-edition/windows-forms/grid/progressbar-cell
And they have Push Button cell type which you could use for your pods on the left side:
http://www.syncfusion.com/products/user-interface-edition/windows-forms/grid/push-button
You might also check DevExpress XtrGrid:
http://www.devexpress.com/products/net/controls/winforms/grid/dataediting.xml
http://www.devexpress.com/products/net/controls/winforms/grid/appearance.xml
In any case, I would search for a component - it takes quite a lot of time to do such things from the scratch.
I have a form which has a Combo Box Control. I have selected the drop down style property to DropDown. I have also set the DropDown Width to 250.
I have set the auto complete mode to suggest and the auto complete source to listitems.
it works absolutely fine when i click on the drop down. but when i type in somethin, the auto complete mode activates a drop down which has a small width.
any help appreciate.
i wanna know how to increase the width of the auto complete drop down via code so that the list items are viewed properly.
I am using C#
Yes, this is by design. ComboBox uses the SHAutoComplete API function to implement the autocomplete feature. Note the declaration, the function takes a handle to the text box portion of the ComboBox. As such, it has no idea that it is actually providing autocomplete info for a ComboBox instead of a TextBox. Accordingly, there is nothing it can do to compensate for the non-standard dropdown width you use.
Well, that explains why it doesn't work. Fixing it is technically possible but quite ugly. You would have to run code in the KeyUp event and use EnumTheadWindows() to find the autocomplete window handle. Then you can use SetWindowPos() to make it larger. There is already code similar to this in ComboBox.cs (AutoCompleteDropDownFinder.FindDropDowns), use the Reference Source or Reflector to help you get this right. Good luck!
EDIT:
I removed my first suggestion to come up with a new link:
Actually its possible to control the width of the Autocomplete dropdown box, but its a little bit tricky and involves using win API extensively ...
Combobox too small when doing Suggest
Maybe this article that I wrote on Codeproject might help you in relation to the combo-dropdown boxes and a way that I hacked this...