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I'm writing this application in C#, .NET 4, winforms.

I want to programatically add new row to a datagridview which is bound to a collection. When I do that I get an exception. (note: when user creates new row via datagridview (types something into new row) I have no problems).

locationBindingSource.AddNew(); //this is bound to datagridview
var row = locationsDGV.Rows[locationsDGV.Rows.Count - 2]; //get the new row
locationsDGV.CurrentCell = row.Cells[0]; //switch to new row <-throws error

Error that is thrown: System.InvalidOperationException was unhandled. Operation did not succeed because the program cannot commit or quit a cell value change.

I need to switch to a new row to ensure that user won't leave row in not validated state.

Is it possible to overcome this without disabling row validation?

Thank you for you answers.

EDIT: Bindingsource is populated with objects created by Entity Framework. When a user creates a new object, for instance "location", it is created with default values, which can't be saved to database, thus I need validation. I validate that all important fields are not empty (or filled with default values). If they are I cancel validation. I think you can easily recreate it with just a simple bindinglist of simple(one string field should be enough) objects bound to a datagridview. Then create a row validating event and validate using something similar.

Location location = (Location)locationBindingSource.Current;
if (string.isNullOrWhitespace(location.stringProperty))
    e.cancel=true;
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  • Maybe a better approach would be to add your row to the DataGridView instead of the datasource and include default data that is not invalid. Similar to this: Add new row to DataGridView
    – Brad Rem
    Mar 20, 2012 at 20:25
  • If possible can you give enough code in your question to duplicate the issue - in particular that code you use to populate the bindingsource and any code that is triggered on validation.
    – David Hall
    Mar 20, 2012 at 21:39
  • I've managed to duplicate the error (adding in some validaiton code) but you might want to include your actual code in case other people can help. I'm still looking.
    – David Hall
    Mar 20, 2012 at 21:51

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