1

I'm using Visual Basic 2010 Express. When I add a NumericUpDown control to a form, the properties listing for events is not showing a MouseMove event. I know that it exists and I can use AddHandler to create a working handler for it, but it just doesn't show up. It doesn't it show up in the intellisense listing either.

Is there a way to "refresh" the Visual Studio so that it's included?

2 Answers 2

1

From the source code of the UpDownBase control from which it inherits from:

[EditorBrowsable(EditorBrowsableState.Never)]
[Browsable(false)]
public new event MouseEventHandler MouseMove

Microsoft decided not to make it public. The reason being, I would guess, is that it just doesn't make sense to do anything with a MouseMove event on that control. It is a composite control comprised of a TextBox and some buttons.

If exposing that event is important, you would have to inherit from the NumericUpDown control and expose the event yourself:

public class MyUpDown : NumericUpDown {

  [Browsable(true)]
  [EditorBrowsable(EditorBrowsableState.Always)]
  public new event MouseEventHandler MouseMove {
    add { base.MouseMove += value; }
    remove { base.MouseMove -= value; }
  }
}

And the VB.Net version:

Public Class MyUpDown
  Inherits NumericUpDown

  <Browsable(True)> _
  <EditorBrowsable(EditorBrowsableState.Always)> _
  Public Shadows Event MouseMove(sender As Object, e As MouseEventArgs)

  Protected Overrides Sub OnMouseMove(e As MouseEventArgs)
    MyBase.OnMouseMove(e)
    RaiseEvent MouseMove(Me, e)
  End Sub
End Class
1
  • 1
    The add {} and remove{} lines should reference "base.MouseMove", not "this.MouseMove" otherwise it crashes. Sep 2, 2020 at 6:49
0

You have to know that even if you set MouseMove and MouseLeave events to NumericUpDown control, they are will not working properly. And if you really want to handle NumericUpDown's text box mouse events, you should set it to a second element of NumericUpDown's Controls collection (it'll be TextBox part).

Like this (C# syntax):

myNumericUpDown->Controls[1]->MouseLeave += gcnew System::EventHandler(this, &Form1::myNumericUpDown_MouseLeave);
myNumericUpDown->Controls[1]->MouseMove += gcnew System::Windows::Forms::MouseEventHandler(this, &Form1::myNumericUpDown_MouseMove);

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.