I found an answer using some code from the great ObjectListView code-project:
http://www.codeproject.com/KB/list/ObjectListView.aspx
call GetScrollInfo:
private const int SIF_RANGE = 0x0001;
private const int SIF_PAGE = 0x0002;
private const int SIF_POS = 0x0004;
private const int SIF_DISABLENOSCROLL = 0x0008;
private const int SIF_TRACKPOS = 0x0010;
private const int SIF_ALL = (SIF_RANGE | SIF_PAGE | SIF_POS | SIF_TRACKPOS);
[DllImport("user32.dll", CharSet = CharSet.Auto, ExactSpelling = true)]
public static extern bool GetScrollInfo(IntPtr hWnd, int fnBar, SCROLLINFO scrollInfo);
public static SCROLLINFO GetFullScrollInfo(ListView lv, bool horizontalBar) {
int fnBar = (horizontalBar ? SB_HORZ : SB_VERT);
SCROLLINFO scrollInfo = new SCROLLINFO();
scrollInfo.fMask = SIF_ALL;
if (GetScrollInfo(lv.Handle, fnBar, scrollInfo))
return scrollInfo;
else
return null;
}
with this data struct:
[StructLayout(LayoutKind.Sequential)]
public class SCROLLINFO
{
public int cbSize = Marshal.SizeOf(typeof(NativeMethods.SCROLLINFO));
public int fMask;
public int nMin;
public int nMax;
public int nPage;
public int nPos;
public int nTrackPos;
}
the nMax gives the total max scroll value including the scroll handle itself, so the actually useful max value is nMax - nPage, where nPage is the size of the scroll handle.
This works great !