You should rely on the KeyUp event
rather than on the KeyDown
one. Also for the ListBox
you just need the SelectedIndexChanged
event. Additionally, your code has quite a few errors (wrong query (-> you don't need to call your DB every time to order the items in the ListBox), relies on SelectedIndex
rather than on SelectedItem
...). Here you have an updated version:
Private Sub txtemployeename_KeyUp(sender As Object, e As System.Windows.Forms.KeyEventArgs) Handles txtemployeename.KeyUp
Dim s As String = txtemployeename.Text
LstEmployee.Visible = True
Dim list = LstEmployee.Items.Cast(Of String)()
Dim query = From item As String In list Where item.Length >= s.Length AndAlso item.ToLower().Substring(0, s.Length) = s.ToLower() Select item
If (query.Count > 0) Then
Dim newItems = New List(Of String)()
For Each result In query
newItems.Add(result)
Next
LstEmployee.Items.Clear()
For Each newItem In newItems
LstEmployee.Items.Add(newItem)
Next
End If
End Sub
Private Sub LstEmployee_SelectedIndexChanged(sender As System.Object, e As System.EventArgs) Handles LstEmployee.SelectedIndexChanged
txtemployeename.Text = LstEmployee.SelectedItem
End Sub
The code above checks for occurrences (i.e., if the whole string in the txtemployeename
matches (caps do not matter) the starting substring of, at least, one element in LstEmployee
) every time a new character is introduced in txtemployeename
. The ListBox is updated with these ocurrences. txtemployeename
displays the name of the selected item in LstEmployee
.
I hope that this will be enough to help you to build the code required to deliver the exact functionalities you are after.
NOTE: bear in mind that this approach (deleting/adding Items
) is incompatible with cases where the ListView is populated with a DataSource
. If you rely on a DataSource you would have to update this code accordingly.
NOTE2: the proposed approach deals with the elements in the ListView. You have to introduce these elements at the start from whatever source you are using; this code only updates existing information (items in the ListBox). Also bear in mind that this code is expected to be corrected to match your exact requirements; for example: list
has to be associated with the total number of items (the ones retrieved from your datasource at the start), not with the current ones (as displayed in the code; it just represents a simplified version of the problem): every time a new population occurs all the items (other than the target ones) are deleted and thus the ListBox does not represent a reliable source. Example to understand this: at the start, you have "aaaa", "bbbb", "cccc"; if you type "a", all the elements except "aaaa" would be deleted. If you type now "b" and consider the actual elements in the ListBox, no change would occur as far as the only element is "aaaa"; you would have to consider all the original elements (which, as suggested via comment, might be stored at the start in an array/list of strings).
up
anddown
key?