Introduction
There are many articles that explain how to add controls to a DataGrid that can be used to represent and edit data in a format other than a common EditBox, however they all appear to require the programmer to edit the html in the .aspx page(s) rather than use code held solely in the .cs Codebehind files. I have in the past had to implement many different controls that can be used to represent and edit controls within a DataGrid
and here I will demonstrate the CheckBox template column with bound CheckBoxes as it is one of the simplest but the the most used control other then the EditBox, and is used to edit fields that are of the boolean type.
ITemplate implementation
Before we can implement the class that will be used as a column within our DataGrid, a class that derives from ITemplate
will need to be created that can be used
for representing and or editing the data within the grid. In most cases a
seperate class will need to be defined for displaying and editing, eg containing
a label control or an edit box control. Fortunately we can use the same control,
a CheckBox, to represent the boolean state as well as edit it.
public CheckBoxItem(bool editable)
{
readOnly = (editable==true)?false:true;
}
Handling the DataBinding event
Because the CheckBox control is to represent data that is held in the DataGrid then it will need to handle the DataBinding
event, which will be called once for each row in the DataGrid. This can be set up in the InstantiateIn
method implementation which is the one and only method of the ITemplate
interface.
void ITemplate.InstantiateIn(Control container)
{
CheckBox box = new CheckBox();
box.DataBinding += new EventHandler(this.BindData);
container.Controls.Add(box);
}
Processing the DataBinding event
The handler for the DataBinding
event is used to set the state of the
control depending on the data within the underlying DataGrid as well as set the
editable state depending on whether it is being used to view the data or edit
the data.
public void BindData(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
CheckBox box = (CheckBox) sender;
DataGridItem container = (DataGridItem) box.NamingContainer;
box.Checked = false;
box.Enabled = (readOnly == true) ? false:true;
string data = ((DataRowView) container.DataItem)[dataField].ToString();
Type type = ((DataRowView)
container.DataItem).DataView.Table.Columns[dataField].DataType;
if (data.Length>0)
{
switch (type.ToString())
{
case "System.Boolean":
if ( data == "True")
{
box.Checked = true;
}
break;
default:
break;
}
}
}
CheckBox Template Column
The class that will be used as the column in our DataGrid will be derived from the System.Web.UI.WebControls.TemplateColumn
class. We add objects of the above ITemplate
implementation class to the ItemTemplate
property, for display, and EditItemTemplate
property, for editing.
public CheckBoxColumn()
{
viewItem = new CheckBoxItem(false);
this.ItemTemplate = viewItem as ITemplate;
editItem = new CheckBoxItem(true);
this.EditItemTemplate = editItem as ITemplate;
}
Adding the Column to the DataGrid
The penultimate step is to add the column to the DataGrid itself. Because of the way we have designed the class this is simplicity itself as it can be used in place of a BoundColumn
.
CheckBoxColumn checkCol = new CheckBoxColumn();
checkCol.HeaderText = "Boolean Field (Editable)";
checkCol.DataField = "Boolean";
...
DataGrid1.Columns.Add(checkCol);
Extracting the Updated State
The final step is extracting the data from the control itself when it comes to updating or inserting a row. Again we use a similar method as that normally employed however instead of a TextBox
we use a CheckBox
.
sqlUpdateCommand1.Parameters["@Boolean"].Value
= ((CheckBox)e.Item.Cells[4].Controls[0]).Checked;
AutoPostBack and receiving the CheckedChanged event
It was recently asked if it was possible to receive the CheckedChanged
event from the CheckBoxes that were contained within the column. I have since updated the code to handle the scenario where you have a DataGrid with a CheckGridColumn and it is possible to update the field immediately.
To add a column to our DataGrid that handles this
sceanrio we do the following.
CheckBoxColumn checkCol2 = new CheckBoxColumn(true);
checkCol2.HeaderText = "Boolean Field (Always Editable)";
checkCol2.DataField = "Boolean";
checkCol2.CheckedChanged += new EventHandler(this.OnCheckChanged);
...
DataGrid2.Columns.Add(checkCol2);
Now because we need to handle the event to change our database entry we need to extract the relevent information from the DataGrid as well as extract the state of the CheckBox. The following sample shows how this could be done.
private void OnCheckChanged(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
CheckBox box = (CheckBox) sender;
DataGridItem container = (DataGridItem) box.NamingContainer;
sqlUpdateCommand1.Parameters["@Object_id"].Value
= int.Parse(container.Cells[0].Text);
sqlUpdateCommand1.Parameters["@Boolean"].Value = box.Checked;
...
}
Documentation
The code has been documented using the /// documentation syntax. I prefer to use NDOC which can be found at Sourceforge for my Documentation generation engine. It also handles all those tags that Microsoft created and then forgot about.
Article History
29 July 2002 - Original Article Posted
03 Sept 2002 - Updated Article with Commented Source Code
Feedback
Your feedback is important to me and I am always willing to make improvements. If you found this article useful don't forget to vote.
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