Suppose I have many controls on Windows Form. Is there any way to know how much memory is used for each control? Are there any free tools that can display the memory info? Thanks.
3 Answers
Windows forms controls are not just memory. In fact with memory being so cheap and available, it is rarely the bottleneck - especially managed memory.
You need to bear in mind that Windows forms controls are using WIN32 window object which contains window handles and various WIN32 GDI objects. They also have a presence on the heap as a managed object but the managed memory usage is not going to be huge.
In order to answer your question, you can use memory profilers.
Only way that you could get an info about controls' memory usage is that each control is designed to provide such an information. However, most simple classes such as 'string' doesn't supply it, and you have to either guess or google for determining its size.
As for GUI controls - some are HWND bound, some are not. Some have some other handles attached to them, some don't. Some have some shared resources, so first instance of the control (or group) will increase memory usage, second instance won't, and so on...
Paint
event handler, rather than using a native Windows control? Yes, that's an option, but it is rarely necessary. Windows supports more than a reasonable amount of controls. If you need more than that, you have too many. A better option than psuedo-controls is replacing multiple smaller controls with one larger control. Several radio buttons become a combobox, for example. Using a ListView or a TreeView can also provide you with a lot of rich functionality while still using only one control.