Introduction
When user clicks some content in the ListViewDetail
,
it returns the row and column indexes of the clicked subitem.
This control supports checked subitems through AddCheckedSubItem
, SetCheck
and
IsChecked
methods. There is also a routine for iterative coloring of the control included in the TPLib.Misc
namespace.
Background
When using the Windows Forms ListView
control, you have
no way to find which subitem the user has clicked or to have checkable subitems,
so I've developed ListViewDetail
.
Using the code
Control behaves much like an ordinary ListView
. The only difference is in the following methods:
AddCheckedSubItem
- adds a checked subitem to ListViewItem
ListViewItem lvi = new ListViewItem();
lvi.Text = "Some text";
listView1.AddCheckedSubItem( lvi, true );
listView1.AddCheckedSubItem( lvi, false );
listView1.AddCheckedSubItem( lvi, true );
listView1.Items.Add( lvi );
SetCheck
- sets the check in the subitem to
true
/
false
listView1.SetCheck( listViewItem, colIndex, true );
IsChecked
- returns the check state of the subitem
listView1.IsChecked( listViewItem.SubItems[5] )
There is also a class named ListViewOperations
which
contains two static methods, IterateColors( ListView lv, Color color1, Color color2 )
and IterateColors( ListView lv )
which iteratively set
the ListView
items' background colors.
IterateColors( lv, Color.White, Color.WhiteSmoke );