1

I will explain the situation:

  1. My form have a listview, a textbox, and a label.

  2. The Textbox is to write a directory path to add that directory to the listview.

  3. With the event OnTextchanged of the textbox I check if the listview contains the textbox text before adding it, if yes then the label says "Directory is already in the listview" if not then the label says otherwise.

  4. Now, after adding the directory path from the textbox to the listview, like I don't modified the textbox text after adding the text to the listview then the OnTextChanged event of the textbox is not processed so the label is still saying that the directory IS NOT inside the listview (because the OnTextchanged event is not processed).

Then to solve this little issue I refresh the text of the textbox after adding the text to the listviewx, I did it with a little snippet I've made for this:

Private Sub Refresh_Textbox_Text(ByVal TextBox As TextBox)
    Dim TempText As String = TextBox.Text
    TextBox.Clear()
    TextBox.Text = TempText
End Sub

But I think that's a noob way to do it, I wonder if exists a native method to do refresh in the way I need the text of a textbox like seen in that snippet, I've tried with some methods as "refresh", "invalidate", etc... but none does the same.

3
  • What platform? ASP.NET, WinForms, WPF, MVC...?
    – Tim
    Jun 29, 2013 at 17:00
  • It is not clear to me what is your problem. Do you want to clear the label text after adding the TextBox.Text to the listbox?
    – Steve
    Jun 29, 2013 at 17:05
  • Is the directory typed or pasted entirely? What triggers the add to the ListView, pressing return or a button?
    – KekuSemau
    Jun 29, 2013 at 17:07

3 Answers 3

2

There really is not a Native way to raise the TextChanged event without actually changing the Text, the Updated and Refresh Methods deal mainly with refreshing the drawing of the Control. But if this is something that you need to add to additional TextBoxes you can try making an Extension method, or you can add a Handler to your TextBox's Invalidated Event .

Using the Invalidated event

void textBox1_Invalidated(object sender, InvalidateEventArgs e)
{
    textBox1_TextChanged(sender, new EventArgs());
}

Extension Method

I will admit that this is probably overkill....

Quick and dirty example:

using System;
using System.Windows.Forms;
using ExtensionMethods;
namespace WindowsFormsApplication1
{
    public partial class Form1 : Form
    {
        public Form1()
        {
            InitializeComponent();
        }

        private void textBox1_TextChanged(object sender, EventArgs e)
        {

        }

        private void button1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
        {
            textBox1.RefreshCurrent();
        }
    }
}

namespace ExtensionMethods
{
    public static class MyExtensions
    {
        public static void RefreshCurrent( this TextBox tb)
        {
            string temp = tb.Text;
            tb.Text = "";
            tb.Text = temp;

        }
    }
}
2
  • Thankyou so much you've understanded what I need, sorry 'cause my english. Jun 29, 2013 at 19:10
  • 1
    EventArgs.Empty is available instead of New EventArgs(). Jun 29, 2013 at 19:56
2

Try inserting Me.Refresh() like so

Private Sub Refresh_Textbox_Text(ByVal TextBox As TextBox)

   Dim TempText As String = TextBox.Text
    TextBox.Clear()
    TextBox.Text = TempText
    Me.Refresh()
End Sub

Hope this helps

1
  • Thanks but I don't need to add anything to the snippet I've posted... I think you don't understanded it, my snippet is working, the problem is I ask if I can reproduce the same with a native method because if I use "Textbox1.Refresh" or "Textbox1.invalidate" the "TextChanged" event does not succed. Jun 29, 2013 at 17:05
1

I don't understand the 4th step completely, but have a look to the following code

Dim ListItems1 As New List(Of String)

Private Sub Form1_Load(sender As System.Object, e As System.EventArgs) Handles MyBase.Load
    Button1.Enabled = False
    Label1.Text = ""
End Sub

Private Sub Button1_Click(ByVal sender As System.Object, ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles Button1.Click
    ListItems1.Add(TextBox1.Text)
    ListView1.Items.Add(TextBox1.Text)
    Label1.Text = ""
    TextBox1.Text = ""
    TextBox1.Focus()
End Sub

Private Sub TextBox1_TextChanged(sender As System.Object, e As System.EventArgs) Handles TextBox1.TextChanged
    If TextBox1.Text.Length = 0 Then
        Button1.Enabled = False
    Else
        If ListItems1.Contains(TextBox1.Text) Then
            Label1.Text = "Directory is already in the listview"
            Button1.Enabled = False
        Else
            Label1.Text = "Directory is not in the listview"
            Button1.Enabled = True
        End If
    End If
End Sub

if you don't want a button to exist, try the following

Dim ListItems1 As New List(Of String)

Private Sub Form1_Load(sender As System.Object, e As System.EventArgs) Handles MyBase.Load
    Label1.Text = ""
End Sub

Private Sub TextBox1_TextChanged(sender As System.Object, e As System.EventArgs) Handles TextBox1.TextChanged
    If TextBox1.Text.Length = 0 Then
        Label1.Text = ""
    Else
        If ListItems1.Contains(TextBox1.Text) Then
            Label1.Text = "Directory is already in the listview"
        Else
            Label1.Text = "Directory is not in the listview"
        End If
    End If
End Sub

Private Sub TextBox1_KeyPress(sender As Object, e As System.Windows.Forms.KeyPressEventArgs) Handles TextBox1.KeyPress
    If Asc(e.KeyChar) = 13 And ListItems1.Contains(TextBox1.Text) = False And TextBox1.Text.Length > 0 Then
        ListItems1.Add(TextBox1.Text)
        ListView1.Items.Add(TextBox1.Text)
        TextBox1.Text = ""
        Label1.Text = ""
    End If
End Sub
0

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