For very large lists, the Virtual Mode ListView is the answer for certain. In non-virtual mode it seems to draw the entire list and then clip it to the view, while in Virtual mode it simply draws the ones in the view. In my case the list was 40K+ records. In non-virtual mode an update to the ListView could take minutes. In virtual mode it was instantaneous.
To sort the list, you must sort the underlying datasource, as has already been mentioned. That is the easy part. You will also need to force a refresh to the display, which is not done automatically. You can use ListView.TopItem.Index to find the index in the underlying data source that corresponds to the top row of the Virtual ListView before the sort. There is also an API call that returns the number of display rows in the ListView that you can implement as C# function, like this:
public const Int32 LVM_GETCOUNTPERPAGE = 0x1040;
public static int GetListViewRows( ListView xoView )
{
return (int)WindowsMessage.SendMessage( xoView.Handle, LVM_GETCOUNTPERPAGE, 0, 0 );
}
That will let you calculate the range you have to update. About the only remaining question is how you reconcile the existing display with what will appear after the data have been sorted. If you want to leave the same data element in the top row, you must have some mechanism in place that will find its new index in the newly sorted list, so you can replace it in the top position - something essentially equivalent to an SQL IDENTITY.