4

How can I set a NumericUpDown control to display values as percentages?

2 Answers 2

6

You'll have to derive your own custom control and override the UpdateEditText() method. While we're at it, let's override the default Minimum, Maximum, and Increment property values to be a little more percentage-friendly.

We'll also need to override the base ParseEditText() method to interpret the user-generated input as a percentage (dividing by 100), because the user will expect to enter 80 to represent 80% (and the Decimal parser needs to ignore the percentage sign).

Public Class PercentUpDown
    Inherits NumericUpDown

    Private Shared ReadOnly DefaultValue As New [Decimal](0.0)      ' 0%
    Private Shared ReadOnly DefaultMinimum As New [Decimal](0.0)    ' 0%
    Private Shared ReadOnly DefaultMaximum As New [Decimal](1.0)    ' 100%
    Private Shared ReadOnly DefaultIncrement As New [Decimal](0.01) ' 1%

    Public Sub New()
        Value = DefaultValue
        Minimum = DefaultMinimum
        Maximum = DefaultMaximum
        Increment = DefaultIncrement
    End Sub

    Protected Overrides Sub UpdateEditText()
        If UserEdit Then
            ParseEditText()
        End If

        Text = Value.ToString(String.Format("p{0}", DecimalPlaces))
    End Sub

    Protected Shadows Sub ParseEditText()
        Debug.Assert(UserEdit = True, "ParseEditText() - UserEdit == false")

        Try
            If Not String.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(Text) AndAlso _
               Not (Text.Length = 1 AndAlso Text.Equals("-")) Then

                Value = Constrain(Decimal.Parse(Text.Replace("%", String.Empty), NumberStyles.Any, CultureInfo.CurrentCulture) / 100)

            End If
        Catch ex As Exception
            ' Leave value as it is
        Finally
            UserEdit = False
        End Try
    End Sub

    Private Function Constrain(origValue As [Decimal]) As [Decimal]
        Debug.Assert(Minimum <= Maximum, "minimum > maximum")

        If origValue < Minimum Then Return Minimum
        If origValue > Maximum Then Return Maximum

        Return origValue
    End Function

End Class

We could expand the scope of the class a little by adding a TextFormat property where we could set the numeric display format we'd like to use at design time, so that we can support displaying the value as a Currency, for example.

The above code, though, is nice and compact and specifically targets Percentages, taking advantage of the existing DecimalPlaces property. The Value property is stored as the mathematical representation of the percentage (0.5 for 50%, for example), so it's simple to plug into a formula without worrying about dividing by 100.

2

A quick and easy answer to this question: use DecimalUpDown from the Extended WPF Toolkit, instead of NumericUpDown (it should be noted that NumericUpDown is listed as obsolete as well). All you need to do then is set Maximum="1" Minimum="0.01" Increment="0.01" FormatString="P0" in the XAML. I'm assuming that this question is about the Extended WPF Toolkit, as the answer above is for it.

Example:

<xctk:DecimalUpDown Maximum="1" Minimum="0.01" Value="0.01" Increment="0.01" FormatString="P0" />

Displays:

DecimalUpDown Example

1
  • The question and the accepted answer are both WinForm issues.
    – LarsTech
    Dec 2, 2015 at 18:10

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