0

I'm trying to bind a list of anonymous type to a DataGridView, but Columns and Rows seems to be empty.

[TestMethod]
public void TestMethod1()
{
    var view = new DataGridView() { DataSource = new[] { new { Foo = 1, Bar = "2" } }};

    Assert.AreEqual(2, view.Columns.Count); // fail, count = 0
    Assert.AreEqual(1, view.Rows.Count); // fail, count = 0
}

I don't find many resources on accessing Columns and Rows after a Binding of anonymous type. Any ideas of why such a comportement?

Edit :

Set the parent to a mock Form, and here you go:

[TestMethod]
public void TestMethod1()
{
    var view = new DataGridView() { Parent = new Form() , DataSource = new[] { new { Foo = 1, Bar = "2" } }};
    Assert.AreEqual(2, view.Columns.Count); // win
    Assert.AreEqual(1, view.Rows.Count); // win
}

1 Answer 1

1

Try calling your TestMethod1 in Load event handler:

private void Form1_Load(object sender, EventArgs e){
   TestMethod1();
}

Also remember that your grid does not have any parent so how it is rendered? So try assign some Parent for it:

var view = new DataGridView(){Parent = this};
//...

The reason is your DataGridView is not rendered at the very beginning before the UI is loaded.

3
  • That's work if I add the DataGridView in a Form. But I doesn't need or want to add the DataGridView to a form. What make the list of Columns and Rows to be set? Nov 18, 2013 at 10:13
  • @CyrilGandon you can't, as I said, if it doesn't have parent, it's not rendered and the columns and rows are rendered only when the grid has parent. When they are not rendered, the columns and rows have no information. You should use some DataTable instead if you don't want to show your grid/table. Setting some data for the grid without showing it doesn't make sense.
    – King King
    Nov 18, 2013 at 10:16
  • Wow, that was the point. var view = new DataGridView() { Parent = new Form() }; works! Nov 18, 2013 at 10:18

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.