71

I have a combobox and I want to prevent the user from scrolling through the items with the mousewheel.

Is there an easy way to do that?

(C#, VS2008)

4 Answers 4

130

Use the MouseWheel event for your ComboBox:

void comboBox1_MouseWheel(object sender, MouseEventArgs e) {
    ((HandledMouseEventArgs)e).Handled = true;
}

Note: you'll have to create event in code:

comboBox1.MouseWheel += new MouseEventHandler(comboBox1_MouseWheel);
5
  • 29
    Works perfectly, thanks! Sidenote: if you want scrolling to still apply when the ComboBox is dropped down, just add the lines: "ComboBox control = (ComboBox)sender;" and "if (!control.DroppedDown)" before the "((HandledMouseEventArgs)e).Handled = true" line. Jul 9, 2012 at 10:50
  • 3
    This currently doesn't work with Mono. bugzilla.xamarin.com/show_bug.cgi?id=25201
    – chrish
    Dec 9, 2014 at 20:50
  • 9
    I know this is old, but I like this version right after InitializeComponent(); in the form constructor: comboBox1.MouseWheel += (o, e) => ((HandledMouseEventArgs)e).Handled = true; Dec 4, 2015 at 20:18
  • This also technique also works for comboboxes in WPF, but with the arguments object sender, System.Windows.Input.MouseWheelEventArgs e in the event handler, and you don't have to cast e to HandledMouseEventArgs
    – chinookf
    Mar 15, 2018 at 17:26
  • 2
    Just wanted to note that this also works with the NumericUpDown control.
    – test
    Mar 26, 2018 at 19:05
8

For WPF, handle the PreviewMouseWheel event instead.

It would also be a good idea to consider ComboBox.IsDropDownOpen so the user can still use mouse scroll if there are a lot of items in the selection when the ComboBox is expanded.

Another thing is to apply the same behavior across the whole application.

I usually do all the above using the following code:

App.xaml

<Application.Resources>
    <Style TargetType="ComboBox">
        <EventSetter Event="PreviewMouseWheel" Handler="ComboBox_PreviewMouseWheel" />
    </Style>
</Application.Resources>

App.xaml.cs

private void ComboBox_PreviewMouseWheel(object sender, System.Windows.Input.MouseWheelEventArgs e)
{
    e.Handled = !((System.Windows.Controls.ComboBox)sender).IsDropDownOpen;
}
0

I use another solution that also works on Mono.

Goal is to prevent accidentally scrolling (that is when the user is not looking at the comboBox when using the mouse wheel). If he / she scroll outside the visible portion of comboBox , the combo box should not scroll, otherwise it should.

My solution:

  • Place a read only text box outside the visible portion of the screen. In form_load I placed the line: hiddenTextbox.left = -100 ;

  • Set the focus to this text box when the mouse leaves the combo box using mouse leave event. In comboBox1_MouseLeave I placed the line: hiddenTextbox.focus();

  • Handle mouseWheel event: From1.MouseWheel += Form1_MouseWheel; textBoxHidden.MouseWheel += Form1_MouseWheel;

0

My Combobox's were placed inside a DataGrid [C#, WPF XAML] just like this:

    <DataGrid x:Name="dgvFieldsMapping" Grid.Row="1" ItemsSource="{Binding}">
        <DataGrid.Columns>
            ...
            <DataGridTemplateColumn Width="*" Header="Destination Field" >
                <DataGridTemplateColumn.CellTemplate >
                    <DataTemplate >
                        <ComboBox ItemsSource="{Binding Source={StaticResource CustomerDbFields}}" SelectedValue="{Binding destinationField, Mode=TwoWay, UpdateSourceTrigger=PropertyChanged}" ></ComboBox>
                    </DataTemplate>
                </DataGridTemplateColumn.CellTemplate>
            </DataGridTemplateColumn>
            ...
        </DataGrid.Columns>
    </DataGrid>

So whenever a DropDown was closed after selecting a Value, the Mousewheel would scroll that Combobox's Items and modify my Selection.

I ended up modifying my XAML to look like this:

    <DataGrid x:Name="dgvFieldsMapping" Grid.Row="1" ItemsSource="{Binding}">
        <DataGrid.Resources>
            <Style x:Key="dgvComboBox_Loaded" TargetType="ComboBox">
                <EventSetter Event="Loaded" Handler="dgvCombobox_Loaded" />
            </Style>
        </DataGrid.Resources>
        <DataGrid.Columns>
            ...
            <DataGridTemplateColumn Width="*" Header="Destination Field" >
                <DataGridTemplateColumn.CellTemplate >
                    <DataTemplate >
                        <ComboBox Style="{StaticResource dgvComboBox_Loaded}" ItemsSource="{Binding Source={StaticResource CustomerDbFields}}" SelectedValue="{Binding destinationField, Mode=TwoWay, UpdateSourceTrigger=PropertyChanged}" ></ComboBox>
                    </DataTemplate>
                </DataGridTemplateColumn.CellTemplate>
            </DataGridTemplateColumn>
            ...
        </DataGrid.Columns>
    </DataGrid>

And adding these lines in codebehind

        public void dgvCombobox_Loaded(Object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
        {
            ((ComboBox)sender).DropDownClosed -= ComboBox_OnDropDownClosed;
            ((ComboBox)sender).DropDownClosed += new System.EventHandler(ComboBox_OnDropDownClosed);
        }

        void ComboBox_OnDropDownClosed(object sender, System.EventArgs e)
        {
            dgvFieldsMapping.Focus();
        }

In this way I just move the Focus away from the ComboBox to the outer DataGrid after closing its corresponding DropDown, so I don't need to add any dummy FrameWorkElement

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.