I know you can remove a button's relief with
button.set_relief(Gtk::RELIEF_NONE); // gtkmm
Or
gtk_button_set_relief(button, GTK_RELIEF_NONE); // gtk
But there's no corresponding method for a combobox.
What's the easiest way to accomplish this?
Related
I have been trying to add the tool item with a checkbox for select/deselect all functionality. The handled tool item -> type in application.e4xmi is not helping as it always creates a button in the toolbar. I tried having a custom tool bar by masking the current tool bar implementation, but since the implementation has to be done in View/Part I couldn't find a better solution.
Please suggest a solution?
The object created by 'Check' is not a button. It is a checkbox which draws as 'pressed' when it is checked, and 'unpressed' when it is not checked. That is the standard Eclipse way of drawing a tool bar check.
If you don't want that, add a Tool Control and create the check box control yourself in the handler for that code.
I have a style for a control and I'd like to add items to the context menu of that control. I was able to replace the context menu with my own but have found no way to add items to the existing one. Is this possible in XAML?
Thanks!
You can always toggle a MenuItem's visibility in XAML using bindings. This allows you to create one context menu but control the options displayed to the user entirely through XAML. This is what I've done in the past as it seems to be the easiest option.
I'm trying to create a button in main window that would look like a globe, which would allow user to select his/her location. I want it to display a listBox when clicked on it just below the button itself.
Any hints on how to do this?
Probably the simplest way to do this is restyle a ComboBox and then restyle the ToggleButton in the ComboBox and remove the editable textbox.
This will avoid you having the implement the functions of the ComboBox for your popup.
Try using this as a starting point.
Another Approach would be to use the Expander Control with a list box in it
Link
OR
You could play with the Listbox's visibility property
In WinForms, I have to quickly set up a list of items that have some text and a dropdown of commands/buttons. This would be easy in XAML (I'm getting spoiled), but I'm not familiar with Winforms.
Do any of the std Winform controls provide this?
Can anyone suggest a 3rd party control??
The image shows a drop-down being shown when hovered.
Thanks
Looks like a normal context menu, so you can probably do this with the ContextMenuStrip component. Call one of its Show() methods when you want to open it.
i am trying to create a wpf app and have different parts in user controls.
in the navigation i have some buttons (now using the ribbon ctp). is it possible to change the main user control when different buttons are pressed in xaml. or is this just a bad way to do things?
sorry, really new to xaml and im trying to get my head arround it.
Further to what Carlo has said,
The way we do it is to have a blank grid in the place you want your controls to all appear and then use BlankGrid.Children.Clear() and BlankGrid.Children.Add() to set up which control is visible in this position.
We found that was the nicest programatically as we have a large number of custom controls, but Carlo's method would work nicely if you wanted to use the designer.
I think this is a pretty regular procedure in WPF. In my experience, me and other programmers put the controls where we want to show them and make their visibility hidden, collapsed or visible depending on what we want to show the user.