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I would like a custom control to provide a different BackColor based on the value of Enabled property. I inherited a Button, and now trying to shadow BackColor property to hide it from the view, and then provide another one, called BackColorEnabled.

Here is a reduced test case for the issue:

Imports System.ComponentModel

Friend Class StyledButton : Inherits Button
  Private _BackColorEnabled As Color

  <Browsable(False)>
  Friend Shadows Property BackColor As Color
    Get
      Return MyBase.BackColor
    End Get
    Set(value As Color)
      MyBase.BackColor = value
    End Set
  End Property

  <Browsable(True)>
  Friend Property BackColorEnabled As Color
    Get
      Return _BackColorEnabled
    End Get
    Set(value As Color)
      _BackColorEnabled = value
    End Set
  End Property

  Sub New()
    _BackColorEnabled = SystemColors.Control
  End Sub

End Class

The problem is that both properties have no effect, i.e. BackColor is still showing up, and BackColorEnabled is not there. According to many links I've found on the net, setting BrowsableAttribute should work 100%. So what's wrong with the above code?

1 Answer 1

3

It seems that WinForms designer does not like when properties are declared as Friend, and completely ignores them as such, even if using a control from the same assembly. After I changed both to Public, it worked like a charm.

As far as I can see, it should not pose a scope problem, because the class itself can remain Friend.

Side note: I first spend considerable time debugging this issue in a bigger project. Then started gathering thoughts about asking a question on SO. Prepared a reduced test case - and then found a solution in a few minutes. Just thought it would be nice to share my findings with the community.

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  • 1
    I knew about Public regarding trying to hide BackColor - the scope has to match as if it goes by a signature, but you were quick. Something related I just ran into: w/ctl inherit from ListView, I want to shadow/consume Headerstyle, but it would not fall of the properties list...it was case sensitive. As soon as I changed it to HeaderStyle (capital S) it went away. I've toggled it back and forth 2-3 times to make sure it wasnt something else. Same thing with BackColor vs Backcolor. If you leave off Shadows, VS will complain, but wont REALLY shadow it unless case matches! maybe a bug Nov 28, 2013 at 3:46

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