I am building a program with c#, and have included a datagridview component into it. The datagridview has a fixed amount of columns (2), which I want to save into two separate arrays. The amount of rows does change though. How could I do this?
3 Answers
Assuming a DataGridView named dataGridView1 and you want to copy the contents of the first two columns into Arrays of strings, you can do something like this:
string[] column0Array = new string[dataGridView1.Rows.Count];
string[] column1Array = new string[dataGridView1.Rows.Count];
int i = 0;
foreach (DataGridViewRow row in dataGridView1.Rows) {
column0Array[i] = row.Cells[0].Value != null ? row.Cells[0].Value.ToString() : string.Empty;
column1Array[i] = row.Cells[1].Value != null ? row.Cells[1].Value.ToString() : string.Empty;
i++;
}
-
@Abe of course if he was using .NET 2.0+ we'd recommend using List<T> rather than an Array or ArrayList. Apr 7, 2011 at 18:40
-
True on my side, but I was under the impression that if you know the length of your collection before hand that is generally better/more efficient to use an Array (though the performance gain may not be noticeable). Apr 7, 2011 at 18:47
-
Um, I don't know if this is a newbie mistake, I am quite new to c#, but this is giving me a NullReferenceException on the column0Array[i]... line when I try to run it.– XedfireApr 7, 2011 at 19:20
-
@Xedfire Ah, the cell that's throwing that exception probably has a null value. I updated the code to handle this situation. In case the ?: operator looks new, check this: ?: Operator (C# Reference) Apr 7, 2011 at 19:35
-
@Jay Wouldn't it have to be .NET 2.0+ if he's using a DataGridView? That wasn't introduced until .NET 2.0...– Joel CApr 7, 2011 at 19:57
Try this:
ArrayList col1Items = new ArrayList();
ArrayList col2Items = new ArrayList();
foreach(DataGridViewRow dr in dgv_Data.Rows)
{
col1Items.Add(dr.Cells[0].Value);
col2Items.Add(dr.Cells[1].Value);
}
-
After first getting the error when using Jay's code, I tried this out - and it did actually work. But, if you say that Jay's is more efficient, I'll probably keep experimenting!– XedfireApr 7, 2011 at 21:49
I used Jay's example and changed it to store all the rows in a single array for easy exporting. At the end you can easily use LogArray[0,0] to get the string from cell 0, column 0.
// create array big enough for all the rows and columns in the grid
string[,] LogArray = new string[dataGridView1.Rows.Count, dataGridView1.Columns.Count];
int i = 0;
int x = 0;
foreach (DataGridViewRow row in dataGridView1.Rows)
{
while (x < dataGridView1.Columns.Count)
{
LogArray[i, x] = row.Cells[x].Value != null ? row.Cells[x].Value.ToString() : string.Empty;
x++;
}
x = 0;
i++; //next row
}
I hope i helped someone with this, its my first time posting any code online, ever. Also i haven't coded in ages just getting started again.