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I have few columns in my DataGridView, and there is data in my rows. I saw few solutions in here, but I can not combine them!

Simply a way to right-click on a row, it will select the whole row and show a menu with an option to delete the row and when the option selected it will delete the row.

I made few attempts but none is working and it looks messy. What should I do?

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Your question is too vague. Add more details where you having a problem. What you are trying to do, is not very difficult. – leppie Jun 14 '10 at 6:11

6 Answers

up vote 15 down vote accepted

I finally solved it:

  • In Visual Studio, create a ContextMenuStrip with an item called "DeleteRow"

  • Then at the DataGridView link the ContextMenuStrip

Using the code below helped me getting it work.

this.MyDataGridView.MouseDown += new System.Windows.Forms.MouseEventHandler(this.MyDataGridView_MouseDown);
this.DeleteRow.Click += new System.EventHandler(this.DeleteRow_Click);

Here is the cool part

private void MyDataGridView_MouseDown(object sender, MouseEventArgs e)
{
    if(e.Button == MouseButtons.Right)
    {
        var hti = MyDataGridView.HitTest(e.X, e.Y);
        MyDataGridView.ClearSelection();
        MyDataGridView.Rows[hti.RowIndex].Selected = true;
    }
}

private void DeleteRow_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
    Int32 rowToDelete = MyDataGridView.Rows.GetFirstRow(DataGridViewElementStates.Selected);
    MyDataGridView.Rows.RemoveAt(rowToDelete);
    MyDataGridView.ClearSelection();
}

I hope the code will help others :-)

I welcome any correction if there is an error.

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Hi what control you use in DeleteRow_Click? – Crimsonland Feb 22 '11 at 23:40
yes it is click – Data-Base Apr 28 '11 at 7:57
This answer does not seems to work when a ContextMenuStripNeeded event is present on the grid. Using CellMouseDown works. – JB. Apr 25 at 14:59

For completness of this question, better to use a Grid event rather than mouse.

First Set your datagrid properties:

SelectionMode to FullRowSelect and RowTemplate / ContextMenuStrip to a context menu.

Create the CellMouseDown event:-

private void myDatagridView_CellMouseDown(object sender, DataGridViewCellMouseEventArgs e)
{
    if (e.Button == MouseButtons.Right)
    {
        int rowSelected = e.RowIndex;
        if (e.RowIndex != -1)
        {
            this.myDatagridView.Rows[rowSelected].Selected = true;
        }
        // you now have the selected row with the context menu showing for the user to delete etc.
    }
}
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This answer works when a ContextMenuStripNeeded is present. The MouseDown based solutions does not. – JB. Apr 25 at 14:58
private void MyDataGridView_MouseDown(object sender, MouseEventArgs e)
{
    if(e.Button == MouseButtons.Right)
    {
        MyDataGridView.ClearSelection();
        MyDataGridView.Rows[e.RowIndex].Selected = true;
    }
}

private void DeleteRow_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
    Int32 rowToDelete = MyrDataGridView.Rows.GetFirstRow(DataGridViewElementStates.Selected);
    MyDataGridView.Rows.RemoveAt(rowToDelete);
    MyDataGridView.ClearSelection();
}
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It's much more easier to add only the event for mousedown:

private void MyDataGridView_MouseDown(object sender, MouseEventArgs e)
{
    if (e.Button == MouseButtons.Right)
    {
        var hti = MyDataGridView.HitTest(e.X, e.Y);
        MyDataGridView.Rows[hti.RowIndex].Selected = true;
        MyDataGridView.Rows.RemoveAt(rowToDelete);
        MyDataGridView.ClearSelection();
    }
}

This is easier. Of cource you have to init your mousedown-event as already mentioned with:

this.MyDataGridView.MouseDown += new System.Windows.Forms.MouseEventHandler(this.MyDataGridView_MouseDown);

in your constructor.

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You can also make this a little simpler by using the following inside the event code:

private void MyDataGridView_MouseDown(object sender, MouseEventArgs e) 
{     
    if (e.Button == MouseButtons.Right)     
    {         
        rowToDelete = e.RowIndex;
        MyDataGridView.Rows.RemoveAt(rowToDelete);         
        MyDataGridView.ClearSelection();     
    } 
}
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This would just delete the row with no warning or confirmation. I'm sure the OP doesn't want that. – ProfK Sep 28 '12 at 8:18

See here it can be done using the DataGridView RowTemplate property.

Note: This code isn't tested but I've used this method before.

// Create DataGridView
DataGridView gridView = new DataGridView();
gridView.AutoGenerateColumns = false;
gridView.Columns.Add("Col", "Col");

// Create ContextMenu and set event
ContextMenuStrip cMenu = new ContextMenuStrip();
ToolStripItem mItem = cMenu.Items.Add("Delete");
mItem.Click += (o, e) => { /* Do Something */ };           

// This makes all rows added to the datagridview use the same context menu
DataGridViewRow defaultRow = new DataGridViewRow();
defaultRow.ContextMenuStrip = cMenu;

And there you go, as easy as that!

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