1

I am using Delphi 2010 and I searched the internet and found a few examples, but neither of them worked. I am using it may because of 2010 and unicode? Anyway......

I am looking for two routines to do a simple save and load to and from file for a TListView. I am only interested in saving the string values in each column. i.e. the caption and the subitems. I am not interested in saving the layout or any objects.

procedure SaveToFile(const FileName: string);
procedure LoadFromFile(const FileName: string);
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  • 1
    Now you reached the time when you'll realize that you should keep data separated from a GUI control.
    – TLama
    Feb 25, 2013 at 18:10
  • @TLama is right, you really don't want to make a visual control be your primary data structure. Feb 25, 2013 at 18:32
  • It is just for a simple destop app, which will not hold much more than a couple hundred items
    – JakeSays
    Feb 25, 2013 at 21:07

2 Answers 2

6

Here's something very crude. It uses a rather limited tab-delimited text format. The contents are not allowed to contain inline tab characters. I've also implemented no error checking whatsoever on the load function. I'm sure you can add that.

uses
  ComCtrls, Types, StrUtils;

procedure ListViewSaveToFile(ListView: TListView; const FileName: string);

  procedure AddTextToLine(var Line: string; const Text: string);
  begin
    Line := Line + Text + #9;
  end;

  procedure MoveCompletedLineToList(const Strings: TStringList; var Line: string);
  begin
    Strings.Add(System.Copy(Line, 1, Length(Line)-1));//remove trailing tab
    Line := '';
  end;

var
  Strings: TStringList;
  LatestLine: string;
  i, j: Integer;

begin
  LatestLine := '';

  Strings := TStringList.Create;
  try
    for i := 0 to ListView.Items.Count-1 do begin
      AddTextToLine(LatestLine, ListView.Items[i].Caption);
      for j := 0 to ListView.Items[i].SubItems.Count-1 do begin
        AddTextToLine(LatestLine, ListView.Items[i].SubItems[j]);
      end;
      MoveCompletedLineToList(Strings, LatestLine);
    end;
    Strings.SaveToFile(FileName, TEncoding.UTF8);
  finally
    Strings.Free;
  end;
end;

procedure ListViewLoadFromFile(ListView: TListView; const FileName: string);
var
  Strings: TStringList;
  i, j: Integer;
  Fields: TStringDynArray;
  Item: TListItem;
begin
  Strings := TStringList.Create;
  try
    Strings.LoadFromFile(FileName);
    ListView.Clear;
    for i := 0 to Strings.Count-1 do begin
      Fields := SplitString(Strings[i], #9);
      Item := ListView.Items.Add;
      Item.Caption := Fields[0];
      for j := 1 to high(Fields) do begin
        Item.SubItems.Add(Fields[j]);
      end;
    end;
  finally
    Strings.Free;
  end;
end;
0

I came up with my own solution, using a TStringList and Name/Value pairs, which seems to work just fine. I store the Item caption in the name, and all the sub columns in the value, then I just parse the value for the individual subitems

procedure LoadFromFile(AListView: TListView; AFileName: string);
var
 I : Integer;
 SL: TStringList;
 Item: TListItem;
 Col0, Col1, Col2, Col3, Col4, Col5: String;
begin
  SL:= TStringList.Create;
  try
    SL.LoadFromFile(AFileName);
    AListView.Items.BeginUpdate;
    AListView.Items.Clear;
    for I:=  0 to SL.Count - 1 do
    begin
     Item:= AlistView.Items.Add;
     Item.Caption:= SL.Names[I];
     parseValue(SL.ValueFromIndex[I], Col0, Col1, Col2, Col3, Col4, Col5);
     Item.SubItems.Add(Col0);
     Item.SubItems.Add(Col1);
     Item.SubItems.Add(Col2);
     Item.SubItems.Add(Col3);
     Item.SubItems.Add(Col4);
     Item.SubItems.Add(Col5);
    end;
    AListView.Items.EndUpdate;
  finally
   SL.Free;
  end;
end;

    procedure SaveToFile(AListView: TListView; AFileName: string);
    var
     I: Integer;
     SL: TStringList;
    begin
     SL:= TStringList.Create;
     for I := 0 to AListView.Items.Count - 1 do
     begin
      SL.Add(AlistView.Items[I].Caption + '=' +
             AlistView.Items[I].SubItems[0] + ',' +
             AlistView.Items[I].SubItems[1] + ',' +
             AlistView.Items[I].SubItems[2] + ',' +
             AlistView.Items[I].SubItems[3] + ',' +
             AlistView.Items[I].SubItems[4] + ',' +
             AlistView.Items[I].SubItems[5])
     end;
     try
      SL.SaveToFile(AFileName);
     finally
       SL.Free;
     end;
    end;

 procedure parseValue(AValue: String; var Col0, Col1, Col2, Col3, Col4, Col5: String);
 var
  I: Integer;
  S: String;
  L: TStringList;
 begin
  //create a temporary list to store the data parts in
  L:= TStringList.Create;
  try
  //iterate through the length of the string
  for I:= 1 to length(AValue) do
  begin
   //if the char is not a comma, append it to S
   if AValue[I] <> ',' then
    S:= S + AValue[I]
   else
   // if char is a comma, add S to temporary list and reset S
   begin
    L.Add(S);
    S:= '';
   end;
  end;
  //add the last string to temporary list
  L.Add(S);
  //assign the items in temporary list to variables to be passed back 
  Col0:= L[0];
  Col1:= L[1];
  Col2:= L[2];
  Col3:= L[3];
  Col4:= L[4];
  Col5:= L[5];
  finally
   L.Free;
  end;
 end;
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  • 1
    What are you going to do when you change the number of columns. You should not hard code that. And why re-invent SplitString. Feb 25, 2013 at 22:00
  • 1
    Im not changing the number of columns, and I wasn't aware of split string. I will use your solution, I was just trying to see if I can write something myself. Learning
    – JakeSays
    Feb 25, 2013 at 23:38
  • No probs. Your solution is quite fine though! Don't get me wrong. I was offering criticism that was hopefully constructive. Don't forget to add error checking though in case the user has messed with the contents of the file between save and load. Feb 26, 2013 at 9:45

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