I have the following code block:
Label[] TagLabels = { labelCITag, labelCATag, labelCAuthTag, labelCLTag, labelCCTag, labelOther1Tag, labelOther2Tag, labelOther3Tag, labelOther4Tag };
TextBox[] TagTextBoxes = { textBoxCITag, textBoxCATag, textBoxCAuthTag, textBoxCLTag, textBoxCCTag, textBoxOther1Tag, textBoxOther2Tag, textBoxOther3Tag, textBoxOther4Tag };
for (int i = 0; i < TagTextBoxes.Length; i++)
{
if (TagTextBoxes[i].Text == "")
TagLabels[i].Visible = false;
else
TagLabels[i].Visible = true;
}
The code iterates through TextBoxes and makes the Labels visible/invisible based on whether the TextBoxes are empty or not.
In the debugging window I can see that the code executes the else condition, but when I move the mouse over the property it still shows as false and it is confirmed in the immediate window.
Can anyone tell me why is this crazy thing happening?
i
. Also, you have the direct reference to the actual control names, so ensure that you're debugging the expected control, by inspecting the control by its name as well (e.g.labelCITag
).if
block withTagLabels[i].Visible = TagTextBoxes[i].Text = ""
. Using an "if true set true else set false" is just redundant.