27

I have a non-visual component which manages other visual controls.

I need to have a reference to the form that the component is operating on, but i don't know how to get it.

I am unsure of adding a constructor with the parent specified as control, as i want the component to work by just being dropped into the designer.

The other thought i had was to have a Property of parent as a control, with the default value as 'Me'

any suggestions would be great

Edit:

To clarify, this is a component, not a control, see here :ComponentModel.Component

9 Answers 9

28

[It is important to understand that the ISite technique below only works at design time. Because ContainerControl is public and gets assigned a value VisualStudio will write initialization code that sets it at run-time. Site is set at run-time, but you can't get ContainerControl from it]

Here's an article that describes how to do it for a non-visual component.

Basically you need to add a property ContainerControl to your component:

public ContainerControl ContainerControl
{
  get { return _containerControl; }
  set { _containerControl = value; }
}
private ContainerControl _containerControl = null;

and override the Site property:

public override ISite Site
{
  get { return base.Site; }
  set
  {
    base.Site = value;
    if (value == null)
    {
      return;
    }

    IDesignerHost host = value.GetService(
        typeof(IDesignerHost)) as IDesignerHost;
    if (host != null)
    {
        IComponent componentHost = host.RootComponent;
        if (componentHost is ContainerControl)
        {
            ContainerControl = componentHost as ContainerControl;
        }
    }
  }
}

If you do this, the ContainerControl will be initialized to reference the containing form by the designer. The linked article explains it in more detail.

A good way to see how to do things is to look at the implementation of Types in the .NET Framework that have behaviour similar to what you want with a tool such as Lutz Reflector. In this case, System.Windows.Forms.ErrorProvider is a good example to look at: a Component that needs to know its containing Form.

11
  • Thanks, this worked fine after a few minor tweaks (added some != null checks to it).
    – Pondidum
    Dec 16, 2008 at 21:55
  • 1
    What exactly is service, it's not any member of the component.
    – Peymankh
    Jan 31, 2010 at 19:09
  • I think service is actually supposed to be host - I switched it, and it's working for me so far.
    – dlras2
    Jun 30, 2010 at 16:33
  • 2
    How does this work at runtime. As far as i can see it is the designer that provides the IDesignerHost implementation, hence it only works in design mode.
    – Fedearne
    Feb 4, 2011 at 11:34
  • 1
    I'm so sorry. That code working correct after drop component to the from, designer generate intialization code to the ContainerControl property! So to use that solution you shoud redrop component to the from. Sep 10, 2011 at 18:51
9

I use a recursive call to walk up the control chain. Add this to your control.

public Form ParentForm
{
    get { return GetParentForm( this.Parent ); }
}

private Form GetParentForm( Control parent )
{
    Form form = parent as Form;
    if ( form != null )
    {
        return form;
    }
    if ( parent != null )
    {
        // Walk up the control hierarchy
        return GetParentForm( parent.Parent );
    }
    return null; // Control is not on a Form
}

Edit: I see you modified your question as I was typing this. If it is a component, the constructor of that component should take it's parent as a parameter and the parent should pass in this when constructed. Several other components do this such as the timer.

Save the parent control as a member and then use it in the ParentForm property I gave you above instead of this.

1
  • 16
    You can also use Control.FindForm() to achieve this.
    – Ray
    Dec 20, 2012 at 10:13
3

You will have to set the parent container some how. Your component is just a class, that resides in memory just like everything else. It has no true context of what created it unless something tells you that it did. Create a Parent control property and set it.

Or simply derive from control and use FindForm(). Not all controls must have a visible component

2

If the componenet is managing other visual controls, then you should be able to get to the parent through them.

2
  • I had thought of this, while it works, it does seem a little 'hacky'
    – Pondidum
    Dec 16, 2008 at 15:30
  • I don't disagree with you, however if this component will always be tied to the controls of the same form that it's on, then you have nothing to lose.
    – BFree
    Dec 16, 2008 at 15:32
2

I found this solution which does not need the input. For C# I implemented it this way:

public partial class RegistryManager : Component, ISupportInitialize
{

    private Form _parentForm;
    public Form ParentForm
    {
        get { return _parentForm;  }
        set { _parentForm = value; }
    }

    // Etc....

    #region ISupportInitialize
    public void BeginInit() {  }
    public void EndInit()
    {
        setUpParentForm();
    }
    private void setUpParentForm()
    {
        if (_parentForm != null) return; // do nothing if it is set
        IDesignerHost host;
        if (Site != null)
        {
            host = Site.GetService(typeof(IDesignerHost)) as IDesignerHost;
            if (host != null)
            {
                if (host.RootComponent is Form)
                {
                    _parentForm = (Form)host.RootComponent;
                }
            }
        }
    }
    #endregion
}

This way allows the set ParentForm by user, but it is set by parent form as Default.

I hope it helps you.

1
  • 1
    Does this actually work for you? For me, host is always set to null. Jun 27, 2013 at 18:11
1

Try This ....

private Form GetParentForm(Control parent)
{
    if (parent is Form)
        return parent as Form;

    return parent.FindForm();
}

Call GetParentForm(this.Parent) from component

1
  • Does not answer the actual question asked. Jun 4, 2023 at 19:51
0

I think you want to use the Site property of the IComponent. It's more or less an equivalent to the Parent property.

1
  • any chance you could be a little more specific please? i have had a look at the site property while debugging, and there seems to be nothing that references the parent form.
    – Pondidum
    Dec 16, 2008 at 15:20
-4

A improvement of above is:

public static Form ParentForm(this Control ctrl) => ctrl as Form ?? ctrl.FindForm();
-4

If the component related Form is the active Form you may get it by Form.ActiveForm.

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