I'm having an issue with a Win-forms Track bar extending beyond the background of the user control. I have it anchored to Bottom, Left, Right. I can set the sizes manually to make it stay in-bounds, but lose the re-sizing ability.
I would like to have the track-bar expand with re-sizing of the form. This is the standard track-bar control for win-forms. I have included a picture below. The track-bar in question is right below the birds. Its a little hard to see but the track-bar extends way beyond the scope of the window.
Hmm, yeah you wouldn't want it going to the birds.
Use the Anchor and Dock properties of the control to adhere it to the edges of your container form.
You can either set them at design time in the Properties Window, or via code that you place in your form's constructor method.
Related
I have a window with a popup that pops when an item in a listview is double clicked.
It centers to the main window and looks really nice floating there.
The problem is when the user moves the main window or selects another program, and the popup floats on top of other stuff.
I would like to have something like a popup, meaning that it floats on top of other elements in the window, but sticks with the main window when it moves (stays centered), and doesn't float on top of other programs.
Can I make a popup act like this, or is there a better way to do it?
Popups will not move while the window is resized or moved. Because, Popups/Context menus are not the part of Visual Tree. You have to use Adorner for this. I will suggest to read this four part series for a quick start on Adorner.
It's possible that an Adorner will fit your needs in this case better than a popup. Adorners can float above your window, too. There are a few differences, mainly that an adorner is bound to a UIElement (which include windows).
If you are willing to use a third-party/open source (MS-PL) option, the Extended WPF Toolkit has a ChildWindow control.
It's technically not a separate window, but it appears to be a separate window to the user.
I have not found a way to make Popups stop doing that in WPF
As an alternative, you can create a UserControl which acts like a Popup.
Usually I host the content section of the app along with the Popup within a Canvas control, and when IsPopupOpen gets changed to True I set the popup Visibility = Visible.
This is a sort of extension of this question I asked yesterday (the question gave me a contentcontrol that can overlay the current control). I now have a contentcontrol that can be overlayed on the current control via bindings (a modal type window). This works well and I am happy with this. One great feature would be if I could get the overlay to go over its parent.
currently the overlay will go into "My Control" control. What I would like is if I can still define it in that control (as that is were it is needed), but when it is displayed it can cover the whole main content area and / or the main window.
is this even possible?
Thanks
Sure it's possible, just wrap it into a Popup! :) You might have to manually stretch it though, but Popup is the control which will let you go outside the bounds of the parent view.
Another way is to host the MainContent in a grid and add a collapsed content control after the MainContent.
To show the popup: put it in the collapsed content control and make it visible.
To hide the popup: collapse the contentn control and remove the popup.
I have a Windows Forms form in C#.
It is just like a regular Windows GUI application. However I am facing problems making the different components on the form resize themselves according to the window size. I mean I do not exactly know which property of the component is to be changed.
I have a tabPage in the form. The tabPage contains a splitcontainer which has 2 panels in it.
The left panel contains a treeView and the right panel has components like radio buttons, textboxes, comboBox and buttons,etc
When I run my application and resize the window (either by dragging a corner of the window or by hitting the maximize button on top right corner) the Windows Forms form and the tabPage expand but the split container doesn't. It stays where it was. Also I want to anchor the split container so that if I shrink my window, the split cointainer still remain on top left. I am sorry I cannot put screenshots here.
Just set the Anchor property of the SplitContainer to Top, Left, Right, Bottom. Or experiment setting the Dock property to Fill.
Have you tried using a TableLayoutPanel? Windows Forms doesn't have great layout support (compared with, say, Java and WPF) but TLP works reasonably well - until you find a situation where it doesn't do what you want, and then it's a pain :)
From what I understand, the popup exists within it's own visual tree. However, I've noticed a few properties, Clip and ClipToBounds. What I am wanting to do is Visually clip a popup at the right and bottom edges of a window regardless of the fact that the popup is independent of the bounds of the window. I'm not using XAML, but if somebody knows how to do it in XAML, then that's fine. I can get to the main window using System.Windows.Application.Current.MainWindow. Is it possible from this to get a value that I can use to clip the popup? I'm assuming that if there is a value that I can use, then I would be able to bind the clipping of the popup to that value. This is really not necessary since after the popup initially opens, if the window gets moved or resized, the popup closes. So I would really only need to clip the popup when it opens. The reason I would like to do this is because although I am using a popup, I don't want it to appear as a popup that exists outside of the window. FYI this is for a popup calendar for a custom datebox. Any ideas, as well as clarification of misconceptions that I may have, would be greatly appreciated.
Furthermore, the popup can be launched from a user control that is not directly on the Main Window. So in that case it would be easier to use a popup. As apposed to a UC inside the XAML
I know this is a year old post, but in case any others come here looking for answers... If you don't need the popup to be outside of your window, why use a popup at all? It'd be far easier to simply use a control in a canvas (for instance) and control it via its Visibility property. Then you'd automagically get your clipping.
The problem is fairly simple, but is best illustrated visually. Note that all screen shots are from the Visual Studio 2005 design surface. I've noticed no difference when I actually run the application.
Here is my user control (let's call this UC-1):
The buttons on the control are set to anchor to Bottom + Right.
Here is what it looks like when placed onto a particular parent user control (UC-A):
Please disregard the difference in colors and such. Some styling is done in the user control's constructor.
Notice the bottom of the control is getting clipped. The instance of the consumed control on the parent is set with a "FixedSingle" border. Notice also that the consumed control is taller than the original, indicating that the buttons bottom anchor settings are being respected, but are essentially overshooting where it should be.
To confirm this is definitely a problem on the parent control, notice another user control (UC-2) containing a data grid view when placed on the same parent:
Again, the instance of the consumed control is set with a "FixedSingle" border which helps illustrate the clipping. The datagrid is properly anchored to the Bottom Right. To reinforce the perplexity of this problem, here's the first user control (UC-1) when placed on a different parent user control (UC-B):
alt text http://i38.tinypic.com/2rnyjd0.png
Here's the second "consumed" control (UC-2) when consumed by a form:
Notice, no clipping this time.
I have spent many hours searching and experimenting to resolve this. I have exhausted the various settings of margins, padding, sizes (min/max), locations, anchors... etc. I can not for the life of me figure out why this one user control is causing child user controls to clip like this.
Another strange thing I noticed was that when I do an UNDO on the parent user control design surface (where the controls are misbehaving), the clipped user control instances actually shift location even though the undo action is unrelated to those controls. For example, if I make the main containing control larger, then undo, a couple of the child user controls jump up. They appear to move about as far as they are being clipped. Very suspicious.
Does anyone have any idea what is going on??
A very interesting problem!
Does your problem parent (UC-A) override any of the methods around sizing or client areas?
Or has UC-A got a negative value for the bottom value of Padding or Margin ?
Is there anything else docked at the bottom edge of UC-A? Perhaps, something that has a negative size?
Or, does UC-A set the constraints of its child controls? If the minimum height of the panel is forced too large, you would get this result.
Hope this is helpful! If not, is there any chance you post the source to UC-A ?
I was having the exact same problem and found your post while searching for a possible solution. Although I'm pretty sure that this is a bug in winforms, I found a bit of a workaround. Just put everything in your user control inside a panel, dock the panel to full, and do your anchoring inside the panel. This seems to alleviate the problem, although my button does tend up to show up at a slightly different size than it should in the parent control. Very weird. I compensated by making the button smaller in the designer, and it stretches wider by a few pixels in the parent control for some unknown reason. Hope this helps.
Assuming the parent control in question is not a standard .NET framework type, but a custom one, I'd guess that it is mixing up client and screen co-ordinates somewhere in it's logic. But that's just a guess.