vote up 11 vote down star
1

To create a new event handler on a control you can do this

c.Click += new EventHandler(mainFormButton_Click);

or this

c.Click += mainFormButton_Click;

and to remove an event handler you can do this

c.Click -= mainFormButton_Click;

But how do you remove all event handlers from a control?

flag

6 Answers

vote up 10 vote down check

I found a solution on the MSDN Forums. The sample code below will remove all Click events from button1.

public partial class Form1 : Form
{
        public Form1()
        {
            InitializeComponent();

            button1.Click += button1_Click;
            button1.Click += button1_Click2;
            button2.Click += button2_Click;
        }

        private void button1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
        {
            MessageBox.Show("Hello");
        }

        private void button1_Click2(object sender, EventArgs e)
        {
            MessageBox.Show("World");
        }

        private void button2_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
        {
            RemoveClickEvent(button1);
        }

        void RemoveClickEvent(Button b)
        {
            FieldInfo f1 = typeof(Control).GetField("EventClick", 
                BindingFlags.Static | BindingFlags.NonPublic);
            object obj = f1.GetValue(b);
            PropertyInfo pi = button1.GetType().GetProperty("Events",  
                BindingFlags.NonPublic | BindingFlags.Instance);
            EventHandlerList list = (EventHandlerList)pi.GetValue(b, null);
            list.RemoveHandler(obj, list[obj]);
        }
    }
}
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If button1 is set to null, are all event handlers attached to button1.Click correctly disposed? – Damien Jul 29 at 4:12
vote up 0 vote down

I just found this reference and thought I would add it. It will remove all events from a control:

namespace CMessWin05
{
    public class EventSuppressor
    {
        Control _source;
        EventHandlerList _sourceEventHandlerList;
        FieldInfo _headFI;
        Dictionary<object, Delegate[]> _handlers;
        PropertyInfo _sourceEventsInfo;
        Type _eventHandlerListType;
        Type _sourceType;


        public EventSuppressor(Control control)
        {
            if (control == null)
                throw new ArgumentNullException("control", "An instance of a control must be provided.");

            _source = control;
            _sourceType = _source.GetType();
            _sourceEventsInfo = _sourceType.GetProperty("Events", BindingFlags.Instance | BindingFlags.NonPublic);
            _sourceEventHandlerList = (EventHandlerList)_sourceEventsInfo.GetValue(_source, null);
            _eventHandlerListType = _sourceEventHandlerList.GetType();
            _headFI = _eventHandlerListType.GetField("head", BindingFlags.Instance | BindingFlags.NonPublic);
        }

        private void BuildList()
        {
            _handlers = new Dictionary<object, Delegate[]>();
            object head = _headFI.GetValue(_sourceEventHandlerList);
            if (head != null)
            {
                Type listEntryType = head.GetType();
                FieldInfo delegateFI = listEntryType.GetField("handler", BindingFlags.Instance | BindingFlags.NonPublic);
                FieldInfo keyFI = listEntryType.GetField("key", BindingFlags.Instance | BindingFlags.NonPublic);
                FieldInfo nextFI = listEntryType.GetField("next", BindingFlags.Instance | BindingFlags.NonPublic);
                BuildListWalk(head, delegateFI, keyFI, nextFI);
            }
        }

        private void BuildListWalk(object entry, FieldInfo delegateFI, FieldInfo keyFI, FieldInfo nextFI)
        {
            if (entry != null)
            {
                Delegate dele = (Delegate)delegateFI.GetValue(entry);
                object key = keyFI.GetValue(entry);
                object next = nextFI.GetValue(entry);

                Delegate[] listeners = dele.GetInvocationList();
                if(listeners != null && listeners.Length > 0)
                    _handlers.Add(key, listeners);

                if (next != null)
                {
                    BuildListWalk(next, delegateFI, keyFI, nextFI);
                }
            }
        }

        public void Resume()
        {
            if (_handlers == null)
                throw new ApplicationException("Events have not been suppressed.");

            foreach (KeyValuePair<object, Delegate[]> pair in _handlers)
            {
                for (int x = 0; x < pair.Value.Length; x++)
                    _sourceEventHandlerList.AddHandler(pair.Key, pair.Value[x]);
            }

            _handlers = null;
        }

        public void Suppress()
        {
            if (_handlers != null)
                throw new ApplicationException("Events are already being suppressed.");

            BuildList();

            foreach (KeyValuePair<object, Delegate[]> pair in _handlers)
            {
                for (int x = pair.Value.Length - 1; x >= 0; x--)
                    _sourceEventHandlerList.RemoveHandler(pair.Key, pair.Value[x]);
            }
        }

    }
}
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vote up 1 vote down

It does no harm to delete non-existing event handler. So if you know what handlers there might be, you can simply delete all of them. I just had similar case. This may help in some cases.

Like:

// add handlers...
if (something)
{
   c.Click += DoesSomething;
}
else
{
   c.Click += DoesSomethingElse;
}

// remove handlers...
c.Click -= DoesSomething;
c.Click -= DoesSomethingElse;
link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

If you reaallly have to do this... it'll take Reflection and quite some time to do this. Eventhandlers are managed in a Event to Delegate Map inside a Control. You would need to

  • reflect and obtain this map in the Control instance.
  • iterate for each event, get the Delegate
    • each delegate in turn could be a chained series of event handlers. So call obControl.RemoveHandler(event, handler)

In short, A lot of work. Possible in theory... never tried something like this.

See if you can have better control/discipline over the subscribe-unsubscribe phase for the control.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

@Jorge Ferreira,

It's a good practice to provide link to the resource from which you copy-pasted answer.

Something like:

<Resource name>:

Quoted text...
link|flag
agreed. Just added. – smink Sep 18 '08 at 11:44
Great. No it looks fine. – aku Sep 18 '08 at 11:50
vote up 3 vote down

From http://bytes.com/forum/thread274921.html

Directly no, in large part because you cannot simply set the event to null.

Indirectly, you could make the actual event private and create a property around it that tracks all of the delegates being added/subtracted to it.

Take the following:

ArrayList delegates = new ArrayList();

private event EventHandler MyRealEvent;

public event EventHandler MyEvent
{
    add
    {
        MyRealEvent += value;
        delegates.Add(value);
    }

    remove
    {
        MyRealEvent -= value;
        delegates.Remove(value);
    }
}

public void RemoveAllEvents()
{
    foreach(EventHandler eh in delegates)
    {
        MyRealEvent -= eh;
    }
    delegates.Clear();
}
link|flag
I thought the OP is referring to general .net controls.. in which this kind of wrapping may not be possible. – Gishu Sep 18 '08 at 11:47

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