142

a lot of people have answered the question of how to bind an enum to a combo box in WinForms. Its like this:

comboBox1.DataSource = Enum.GetValues(typeof(MyEnum));

But that is pretty useless without being able to set the actual value to display.

I have tried:

comboBox1.SelectedItem = MyEnum.Something; // Does not work. SelectedItem remains null

I have also tried:

comboBox1.SelectedIndex = Convert.ToInt32(MyEnum.Something); // ArgumentOutOfRangeException, SelectedIndex remains -1

Does anyone have any ideas how to do this?

6
  • 3
    Why just not try the ComboBox.SelectedValue instead? Dec 18, 2010 at 11:47
  • 7
    If your question has been answered you really should pick an answer.
    – Ryan Leach
    Jun 9, 2013 at 19:25
  • The point of databinding an enum is not quite clear. An enum likely won't change during runtime. You could also write an extension method that would fill the combobox's items collection with all values of the enum.
    – Andreas
    Jul 10, 2013 at 10:53
  • Related: stackoverflow.com/q/5638639/161052
    – JYelton
    Oct 17, 2013 at 16:34
  • @OliverFriedrich SelectedValue causes an InvalidOperationException for me. "Cannot set the SelectedValue in a ListControl with an empty ValueMember."
    – Tyler
    May 3, 2018 at 14:57

28 Answers 28

187

The Enum

public enum Status { Active = 0, Canceled = 3 }; 

Setting the drop down values from it

cbStatus.DataSource = Enum.GetValues(typeof(Status));

Getting the enum from the selected item

Status status; 
Enum.TryParse<Status>(cbStatus.SelectedValue.ToString(), out status); 
3
  • 3
    This is precisely the way that the OP doesn't want to use. Problem is that the user is displayed the name in code of each value, which is subject to refactoring and not user friendly most times.
    – Alejandro
    Sep 28, 2014 at 17:49
  • 1
    This can be simplified further in C# 4.5 and later to: Enum.TryParse(cbStatus.SelectedValue.ToString(), out status);
    – TEK
    Mar 3, 2016 at 12:03
  • @TEK No need to use TryParse or ToString. Just use Status status = (Status)cbStatus.SelectedValue;
    – Stewart
    Mar 22 at 18:30
55

To simplify:

First Initialize this command: (e.g. after InitalizeComponent())

yourComboBox.DataSource =  Enum.GetValues(typeof(YourEnum));

To retrieve selected item on combobox:

YourEnum selectedValue = (YourEnum) yourComboBox.SelectedItem;

If you want to set value for the combobox:

yourComboBox.SelectedItem = YourEnem.Foo;
4
  • 3
    This works as long as the Display value is the same as Value member, otherwise not. Oct 7, 2016 at 21:09
  • How do I bind to an instance? Say the enum is a member of a class? myCar.SpeedMode
    – joe
    Mar 11, 2021 at 7:04
  • The second code line has a minor error and should be YourEnum selectedValue = (YourEnum) yourComboBox.SelectedItem;. enum is a language keyword and cannot be used as a variable name, of course. Unfortunately, I cannot edit the post directly due to too many pending edits.
    – Michaelvsk
    Jan 26 at 12:03
  • @Michaelvsk I've just made this correction.
    – Stewart
    Mar 22 at 18:14
15

The code

comboBox1.SelectedItem = MyEnum.Something;

is ok, the problem must reside in the DataBinding. DataBinding assignments occur after the constructor, mainly the first time the combobox is shown. Try to set the value in the Load event. For example, add this code:

protected override void OnLoad(EventArgs e)
{
    base.OnLoad(e);
    comboBox1.SelectedItem = MyEnum.Something;
}

And check if it works.

0
14

Try:

comboBox1.SelectedItem = MyEnum.Something;

EDITS:

Whoops, you've tried that already. However, it worked for me when my comboBox was set to be a DropDownList.

Here is my full code which works for me (with both DropDown and DropDownList):

public partial class Form1 : Form
{
    public enum BlahEnum
    { 
        Red,
        Green,
        Blue,
        Purple
    }

    public Form1()
    {
        InitializeComponent();

        comboBox1.DataSource = Enum.GetValues(typeof(BlahEnum));

    }

    private void button1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
    {
        comboBox1.SelectedItem = BlahEnum.Blue;
    }
}
1
  • interesting, it's great that you can do ` comboBox1.SelectedItem = BlahEnum.Blue;` but What if you want things in the combobox to be strings e.g. an item of the combobox to be "chewable vitamin pill".?
    – barlop
    Apr 20, 2017 at 12:21
13

Let's say you have the following enum

public enum Numbers {Zero = 0, One, Two};

You need to have a struct to map those values to a string:

public struct EntityName
{
    public Numbers _num;
    public string _caption;

    public EntityName(Numbers type, string caption)
    {
        _num = type;
        _caption = caption;
    }

    public Numbers GetNumber() 
    {
        return _num;
    }

    public override string ToString()
    {
        return _caption;
    }
}

Now return an array of objects with all the enums mapped to a string:

public object[] GetNumberNameRange()
{
    return new object[]
    {
        new EntityName(Number.Zero, "Zero is chosen"),
        new EntityName(Number.One, "One is chosen"),
        new EntityName(Number.Two, "Two is chosen")
    };
}

And use the following to populate your combo box:

ComboBox numberCB = new ComboBox();
numberCB.Items.AddRange(GetNumberNameRange());

Create a function to retrieve the enum type just in case you want to pass it to a function

public Numbers GetConversionType() 
{
    EntityName type = (EntityName)numberComboBox.SelectedItem;
    return type.GetNumber();           
}

and then you should be ok :)

2
  • +1 nice solution. Recently had this very problem and solved in a similar way (just with a Tuple instead). I would turn both the enum value and the description into properties, then add a numberCB.DisplayProperty = "Caption";` and numberCB.ValueProperty = "Num" so that you can use SelectedValue directly and bind to it.
    – Alejandro
    Sep 28, 2014 at 17:55
  • IMHO, maybe more complete sample source code, if too there is functionality like Add “All” / "Select All" option to ComboBox used to filter all rows in a search.
    – Kiquenet
    Oct 17, 2014 at 11:24
9

This is probably never going to be seen among all the other responses, but this is the code I came up with, this has the benefit of using the DescriptionAttribute if it exists, but otherwise using the name of the enum value itself.

I used a dictionary because it has a ready made key/value item pattern. A List<KeyValuePair<string,object>> would also work and without the unnecessary hashing, but a dictionary makes for cleaner code.

I get members that have a MemberType of Field and that are literal. This creates a sequence of only members that are enum values. This is robust since an enum cannot have other fields.

public static class ControlExtensions
{
    public static void BindToEnum<TEnum>(this ComboBox comboBox)
    {
        var enumType = typeof(TEnum);

        var fields = enumType.GetMembers()
                              .OfType<FieldInfo>()
                              .Where(p => p.MemberType == MemberTypes.Field)
                              .Where(p => p.IsLiteral)
                              .ToList();

        var valuesByName = new Dictionary<string, object>();

        foreach (var field in fields)
        {
            var descriptionAttribute = field.GetCustomAttribute(typeof(DescriptionAttribute), false) as DescriptionAttribute;

            var value = (int)field.GetValue(null);
            var description = string.Empty;

            if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(descriptionAttribute?.Description))
            {
                description = descriptionAttribute.Description;
            }
            else
            {
                description = field.Name;
            }

            valuesByName[description] = value;
        }

        comboBox.DataSource = valuesByName.ToList();
        comboBox.DisplayMember = "Key";
        comboBox.ValueMember = "Value";
    }


}
2
8

Try this:

// fill list
MyEnumDropDownList.DataSource = Enum.GetValues(typeof(MyEnum));

// binding
MyEnumDropDownList.DataBindings.Add(new Binding("SelectedValue", StoreObject, "StoreObjectMyEnumField"));

StoreObject is my object example with StoreObjectMyEnumField property for store MyEnum value.

1
  • 2
    This is the best approach by far but as it is, it didn't work for me. I had to use "SelectedItem" instead of "SelectedValue" Mar 15, 2018 at 8:56
5
 public static void FillByEnumOrderByNumber<TEnum>(this System.Windows.Forms.ListControl ctrl, TEnum enum1, bool showValueInDisplay = true) where TEnum : struct
    {
        if (!typeof(TEnum).IsEnum) throw new ArgumentException("An Enumeration type is required.", "enumObj");

        var values = from TEnum enumValue in Enum.GetValues(typeof(TEnum))
                     select
                        new
                         KeyValuePair<TEnum, string>(   (enumValue), enumValue.ToString());

        ctrl.DataSource = values
            .OrderBy(x => x.Key)

            .ToList();

        ctrl.DisplayMember = "Value";
        ctrl.ValueMember = "Key";

        ctrl.SelectedValue = enum1;
    }
    public static void  FillByEnumOrderByName<TEnum>(this System.Windows.Forms.ListControl ctrl, TEnum enum1, bool showValueInDisplay = true  ) where TEnum : struct
    {
        if (!typeof(TEnum).IsEnum) throw new ArgumentException("An Enumeration type is required.", "enumObj");

        var values = from TEnum enumValue in Enum.GetValues(typeof(TEnum))
                     select 
                        new 
                         KeyValuePair<TEnum,string> ( (enumValue),  enumValue.ToString()  );

        ctrl.DataSource = values
            .OrderBy(x=>x.Value)
            .ToList();

        ctrl.DisplayMember = "Value";
        ctrl.ValueMember = "Key";

        ctrl.SelectedValue = enum1;
    }
4
  • what do you mean ? I did not understand your comment. this extension method works Oct 21, 2014 at 10:32
  • That is dependent on if your enum numbers allow OR FLags. if so You can add a flag that is 255 called All, and call the function with All as enum1, which creates the default. i.e. comboBox1.FillByEnumOrderByName(MyEnum.All) Oct 22, 2014 at 10:10
  • Any option like this: var l = values.OrderBy(x=>x.Value).ToList(); l.Insert(0, "All");
    – Kiquenet
    Oct 22, 2014 at 16:55
  • my enum is enum A { duck = 0, swan = 1, joker = 3}; your system will not work for my situation. Oct 27, 2014 at 17:02
4

This worked for me:

comboBox1.DataSource = Enum.GetValues(typeof(MyEnum));
comboBox1.SelectedIndex = comboBox1.FindStringExact(MyEnum.something.ToString());
2
  • This. The simplest + most elegant solution to the problem. Just ensure you My.Settings. Type is set o the enum type.
    – stigzler
    Dec 28, 2021 at 14:04
  • 1
    Even more simpler: comboBox1.SelectedItem = MyEnum.something; works too
    – mBardos
    Mar 8, 2022 at 15:20
3

this is the solution to load item of enum in combobox :

comboBox1.Items.AddRange( Enum.GetNames(typeof(Border3DStyle)));

And then use the enum item as text :

toolStripStatusLabel1.BorderStyle = (Border3DStyle)Enum.Parse(typeof(Border3DStyle),comboBox1.Text);
3

Based on the answer from @Amir Shenouda I end up with this:

Enum's definition:

public enum Status { Active = 0, Canceled = 3 }; 

Setting the drop down values from it:

cbStatus.DataSource = Enum.GetValues(typeof(Status));

Getting the enum from the selected item:

Status? status = cbStatus.SelectedValue as Status?;
1
  • 2
    why use nullable? You could use explicit casting (parenthesis casting) and not use nullable Jul 1, 2016 at 7:47
2
public Form1()
{
    InitializeComponent();
    comboBox.DataSource = EnumWithName<SearchType>.ParseEnum();
    comboBox.DisplayMember = "Name";
}

public class EnumWithName<T>
{
    public string Name { get; set; }
    public T Value { get; set; }

    public static EnumWithName<T>[] ParseEnum()
    {
        List<EnumWithName<T>> list = new List<EnumWithName<T>>();

        foreach (object o in Enum.GetValues(typeof(T)))
        {
            list.Add(new EnumWithName<T>
            {
                Name = Enum.GetName(typeof(T), o).Replace('_', ' '),
                Value = (T)o
            });
        }

        return list.ToArray();
    }
}

public enum SearchType
{
    Value_1,
    Value_2
}
1
  • IMHO, maybe more complete sample source code, if too there is functionality like Add “All” / "Select All" option to ComboBox used to filter all rows in a search.
    – Kiquenet
    Oct 17, 2014 at 11:23
2

None of these worked for me, but this did (and it had the added benefit of being able to have a better description for the name of each enum). I'm not sure if it's due to .net updates or not, but regardless I think this is the best way. You'll need to add a reference to:

using System.ComponentModel;

enum MyEnum
{
    [Description("Red Color")]
    Red = 10,
    [Description("Blue Color")]
    Blue = 50
}

....

    private void LoadCombobox()
    {
        cmbxNewBox.DataSource = Enum.GetValues(typeof(MyEnum))
            .Cast<Enum>()
            .Select(value => new
            {
                (Attribute.GetCustomAttribute(value.GetType().GetField(value.ToString()), typeof(DescriptionAttribute)) as DescriptionAttribute).Description,
                value
            })
            .OrderBy(item => item.value)
            .ToList();
        cmbxNewBox.DisplayMember = "Description";
        cmbxNewBox.ValueMember = "value";
    }

Then when you want to access the data use these two lines:

        Enum.TryParse<MyEnum>(cmbxNewBox.SelectedValue.ToString(), out MyEnum proc);
        int nValue = (int)proc;
1

I use the following helper method, which you can bind to your list.

    ''' <summary>
    ''' Returns enumeration as a sortable list.
    ''' </summary>
    ''' <param name="t">GetType(some enumeration)</param>
    Public Shared Function GetEnumAsList(ByVal t As Type) As SortedList(Of String, Integer)

        If Not t.IsEnum Then
            Throw New ArgumentException("Type is not an enumeration.")
        End If

        Dim items As New SortedList(Of String, Integer)
        Dim enumValues As Integer() = [Enum].GetValues(t)
        Dim enumNames As String() = [Enum].GetNames(t)

        For i As Integer = 0 To enumValues.GetUpperBound(0)
            items.Add(enumNames(i), enumValues(i))
        Next

        Return items

    End Function
1

Convert the enum to a list of string and add this to the comboBox

comboBox1.DataSource = Enum.GetValues(typeof(SomeEnum)).Cast<SomeEnum>();

Set the displayed value using selectedItem

comboBox1.SelectedItem = SomeEnum.SomeValue;
0
1
    public enum Colors
    {
        Red = 10,
        Blue = 20,
        Green = 30,
        Yellow = 40,
    }

comboBox1.DataSource = Enum.GetValues(typeof(Colors));

Full Source...Binding an enum to Combobox

1

You can use a extension method

 public static void EnumForComboBox(this ComboBox comboBox, Type enumType)
 {
     var memInfo = enumType.GetMembers().Where(a => a.MemberType == MemberTypes.Field).ToList();
     comboBox.Items.Clear();
     foreach (var member in memInfo)
     {
         var myAttributes = member.GetCustomAttribute(typeof(DescriptionAttribute), false);
         var description = (DescriptionAttribute)myAttributes;
         if (description != null)
         {
             if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(description.Description))
             {
                 comboBox.Items.Add(description.Description);
                 comboBox.SelectedIndex = 0;
                 comboBox.DropDownStyle = ComboBoxStyle.DropDownList;
             }
         }   
     }
 }

How to use ... Declare enum

using System.ComponentModel;

public enum CalculationType
{
    [Desciption("LoaderGroup")]
    LoaderGroup,
    [Description("LadingValue")]
    LadingValue,
    [Description("PerBill")]
    PerBill
}

This method show description in Combo box items

combobox1.EnumForComboBox(typeof(CalculationType));
0
comboBox1.SelectedItem = MyEnum.Something;

should work just fine ... How can you tell that SelectedItem is null?

1
  • I can check it in the debugger. I assume it is because the type of SelectedItem is object, i.e. a reference type, and enums are value types. Although I would have expected the compiler to catch that.
    – Tony Miletto
    May 25, 2009 at 14:44
0

You could use the "FindString.." functions:

Public Class Form1
    Public Enum Test
        pete
        jack
        fran
        bill
    End Enum
    Private Sub Form1_Load(ByVal sender As System.Object, ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles MyBase.Load
        ComboBox1.DataSource = [Enum].GetValues(GetType(Test))
        ComboBox1.SelectedIndex = ComboBox1.FindStringExact("jack")
        ComboBox1.SelectedIndex = ComboBox1.FindStringExact(Test.jack.ToString())
        ComboBox1.SelectedIndex = ComboBox1.FindStringExact([Enum].GetName(GetType(Test), Test.jack))
        ComboBox1.SelectedItem = Test.bill
    End Sub
End Class
0

You can use a list of KeyValuePair values as the datasource for the combobox. You will need a helper method where you can specify the enum type and it returns IEnumerable> where int is the value of enum and string is the name of the enum value. In your combobox, set, DisplayMember property to 'Key' and ValueMember property to 'Value'. Value and Key are public properties of KeyValuePair structure. Then when you set SelectedItem property to an enum value like you are doing, it should work.

0

At the moment I am using the Items property rather than the DataSource, it means I have to call Add for each enum value, but its a small enum, and its temporary code anyway.

Then I can just do the Convert.ToInt32 on the value and set it with SelectedIndex.

Temporary solution, but YAGNI for now.

Cheers for the ideas, I will probably use them when I do the proper version after getting a round of customer feedback.

0

Old question perhaps here but I had the issue and the solution was easy and simple, I found this http://www.c-sharpcorner.com/UploadFile/mahesh/1220/

It makes use of the databining and works nicely so check it out.

0
comboBox1.DataSource = Enum.GetValues(typeof(MyEnum));

comboBox1.SelectedIndex = (int)MyEnum.Something;

comboBox1.SelectedIndex = Convert.ToInt32(MyEnum.Something);

Both of these work for me are you sure there isn't something else wrong?

1
  • 2
    Not sure this would work if using custom enum values, i.e., enum MyEnum { Something = 47 } May 14, 2012 at 22:13
0

Generic method for setting a enum as datasource for drop downs

Display would be name. Selected value would be Enum itself

public IList<KeyValuePair<string, T>> GetDataSourceFromEnum<T>() where T : struct,IConvertible
    {
        IList<KeyValuePair<string, T>> list = new BindingList<KeyValuePair<string, T>>();
        foreach (string value in Enum.GetNames(typeof(T)))
        {
            list.Add(new KeyValuePair<string, T>(value, (T)Enum.Parse(typeof(T), value)));
        }
        return list;
    }
0

That was always a problem. if you have a Sorted Enum, like from 0 to ...

public enum Test
      one
      Two
      Three
 End

you can bind names to combobox and instead of using .SelectedValue property use .SelectedIndex

   Combobox.DataSource = System.Enum.GetNames(GetType(test))

and the

Dim x as byte = 0
Combobox.Selectedindex=x
0

In Framework 4 you can use the following code:

To bind MultiColumnMode enum to combobox for example:

cbMultiColumnMode.Properties.Items.AddRange(typeof(MultiColumnMode).GetEnumNames());

and to get selected index:

MultiColumnMode multiColMode = (MultiColumnMode)cbMultiColumnMode.SelectedIndex;

note: I use DevExpress combobox in this example, you can do the same in Win Form Combobox

0

A little late to this party ,

The SelectedValue.ToString() method should pull in the DisplayedName . However this article DataBinding Enum and also With Descriptions shows a handy way to not only have that but instead you can add a custom description attribute to the enum and use it for your displayed value if you preferred. Very simple and easy and about 15 lines or so of code (unless you count the curly braces) for everything.

It is pretty nifty code and you can make it an extension method to boot ...

0

only use casting this way:

if((YouEnum)ComboBoxControl.SelectedItem == YouEnum.Español)
{
   //TODO: type you code here
}
0

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