Does anybody know a way to set the ComboBox
's content's width to autosize
I do not mean the ComboBox
itself, just the opened content.
You can't use it directly.
Do a trick
First iterate through all items of your combobox, check for the width of every items by assigning the text to a label. Then, check width every time, if width of current item gets greater than previous items then change the maximum width.
int DropDownWidth(ComboBox myCombo)
{
int maxWidth = 0;
int temp = 0;
Label label1 = new Label();
foreach (var obj in myCombo.Items)
{
label1.Text = obj.ToString();
temp = label1.PreferredWidth;
if (temp > maxWidth)
{
maxWidth = temp;
}
}
label1.Dispose();
return maxWidth;
}
private void Form1_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
comboBox1.DropDownWidth = DropDownWidth(comboBox1);
}
OR
As suggested by stakx, you can use TextRenderer
class
int DropDownWidth(ComboBox myCombo)
{
int maxWidth = 0, temp = 0;
foreach (var obj in myCombo.Items)
{
temp = TextRenderer.MeasureText(obj.ToString(), myCombo.Font).Width;
if (temp > maxWidth)
{
maxWidth = temp;
}
}
return maxWidth;
}
label1.PreferredWidth
might work just fine, a slightly more direct and "expressive" way of measuring text width would be to use TextRenderer.MeasureText
...?
Jan 30, 2011 at 11:19
obj.ToString()
is not a correct text for data-bound combo-boxes.
Jun 4, 2013 at 5:38
comboBox1.DropDownWidth = comboBox1.Items.Cast<string>().Max(x => TextRenderer.MeasureText(x, comboBox1.Font).Width);
obj.ToString()
can be different than the DisplayMember
property of the combobox. myCombo.GetItemText(obj)
is definitely more correct than the other answers
Dec 3, 2015 at 15:43
GetItemText
: comboBox1.DropDownWidth = comboBox1.Items.Cast<object>().Max(o => TextRenderer.MeasureText(comboBox1.GetItemText(o), comboBox1.Font).Width);
obj.ToString() doesn't work for me, I suggest to use myCombo.GetItemText(obj). This works for me:
private int DropDownWidth(ComboBox myCombo)
{
int maxWidth = 0, temp = 0;
foreach (var obj in myCombo.Items)
{
temp = TextRenderer.MeasureText(myCombo.GetItemText(obj), myCombo.Font).Width;
if (temp > maxWidth)
{
maxWidth = temp;
}
}
return maxWidth + SystemInformation.VerticalScrollBarWidth;
}
myCombo.GetItemText(obj)
is definitely more correct than the other answers. obj.ToString()
can be different than the DisplayMember
property of the combobox.
Dec 3, 2015 at 15:43
Here is very elegant solution. Just subscribe your combobox to this event handler:
private void AdjustWidthComboBox_DropDown(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
var senderComboBox = (ComboBox)sender;
int width = senderComboBox.DropDownWidth;
Graphics g = senderComboBox.CreateGraphics();
Font font = senderComboBox.Font;
int vertScrollBarWidth = (senderComboBox.Items.Count > senderComboBox.MaxDropDownItems)
? SystemInformation.VerticalScrollBarWidth : 0;
var itemsList = senderComboBox.Items.Cast<object>().Select(item => item.ToString());
foreach (string s in itemsList)
{
int newWidth = (int)g.MeasureString(s, font).Width + vertScrollBarWidth;
if (width < newWidth)
{
width = newWidth;
}
}
senderComboBox.DropDownWidth = width;
}
This code was taken from the codeproject: Adjust combo box drop down list width to longest string width. But I have modified it to work with comboboxes filled with any data (not only strings).
Graphics
instance right after use, best by wrapping it inside a using
block.
Mostly the same code as in Javed Akram's second suggestion, but the width of the vertical scroll bar is added:
int setWidth_comboBox(ComboBox cb)
{
int maxWidth = 0, temp = 0;
foreach (string s in cb.Items)
{
temp = TextRenderer.MeasureText(s, cb.Font).Width;
if (temp > maxWidth)
{
maxWidth = temp;
}
}
return maxWidth + SystemInformation.VerticalScrollBarWidth;
}
Use the code like this (on a form with a combobox with the name myComboBox):
myComboBox.Width = setWidth_comboBox(myComboBox);
Vote for algreat's answer below.
I simply modified algreat's answer with code resize the entire control.
I would have just added it as a comment but couldn't add formatted code on the comment.
private void combo_DropDown(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
//http://www.codeproject.com/Articles/5801/Adjust-combo-box-drop-down-list-width-to-longest-s
ComboBox senderComboBox = (ComboBox)sender;
int width = senderComboBox.DropDownWidth;
Graphics g = senderComboBox.CreateGraphics();
Font font = senderComboBox.Font;
int vertScrollBarWidth =
(senderComboBox.Items.Count > senderComboBox.MaxDropDownItems)
? SystemInformation.VerticalScrollBarWidth : 0;
int newWidth;
foreach (string s in ((ComboBox)sender).Items)
{
newWidth = (int)g.MeasureString(s, font).Width
+ vertScrollBarWidth;
if (width < newWidth)
{
width = newWidth;
}
if (senderComboBox.Width < newWidth)
{
senderComboBox.Width = newWidth+ SystemInformation.VerticalScrollBarWidth;
}
}
senderComboBox.DropDownWidth = width;
}
Old but classic, hope to work fast enough
private int GetDropDownWidth(ComboBox combo)
{
object[] items = new object[combo.Items.Count];
combo.Items.CopyTo(items, 0);
return items.Select(obj => TextRenderer.MeasureText(combo.GetItemText(obj), combo.Font).Width).Max();
}
Please see my solution below:
private int AutoSizeDropDownWidth(ComboBox comboBox)
{
var width = cmboxUnit.DropDownWidth;
var g = cmboxUnit.CreateGraphics();
var font = cmboxUnit.Font;
var verticalScrollBarWidth = cmboxUnit.Items.Count > cmboxUnit.MaxDropDownItems
? SystemInformation.VerticalScrollBarWidth : 0;
var itemsList = cmboxUnit.Items.Cast<object>().Select(item => item);
foreach (DataRowView dr in itemsList)
{
int newWidth = (int)g.MeasureString(dr["Name"].ToString(), font).Width + verticalScrollBarWidth;
if (width < newWidth)
{
width = newWidth;
}
}
return width;
}
This answers is based on @user2361362 answer. The code is modified using LINQ and converted into a function that sets the drop down width of a given ComboBox:
private void SetComboBoxDropDownWidth(ComboBox comboBox)
{
var width = (from object obj in comboBox.Items
select TextRenderer.MeasureText(comboBox.GetItemText(obj), comboBox.Font).Width)
.Prepend(0)
.Max();
comboBox.DropDownWidth = width + SystemInformation.VerticalScrollBarWidth;
}
This is an old question, but I just ran into it and combined a couple of the answers for my solution. I liked the simplicity of the accepted answer but wanted something that would work with any object type in the combo box. I also wanted to make use of the method through an extension method.
public static int AutoDropDownWidth(this ComboBox myCombo)
{
return AutoDropDownWidth<object>(myCombo, o => o.ToString());
}
public static int AutoDropDownWidth<T>(this ComboBox myCombo, Func<T, string> description)
{
int maxWidth = 1;
int temp = 1;
int vertScrollBarWidth = (myCombo.Items.Count > myCombo.MaxDropDownItems)
? SystemInformation.VerticalScrollBarWidth : 0;
foreach (T obj in myCombo.Items)
{
if (obj is T)
{
T t = (T)obj;
temp = TextRenderer.MeasureText(description(t), myCombo.Font).Width;
if (temp > maxWidth)
{
maxWidth = temp;
}
}
}
return maxWidth + vertScrollBarWidth;
}
This way if my class is:
public class Person
{
public string FullName {get;set;}
}
I could auto adjust the combo box drop down width like this:
cbPeople.DropDownWidth = cbPeople.AutoDropDownWidth<Person>(p => p.FullName);
TComboBox.ItemWidth is the property you seek. It has the behavior you want without any coding. Just set it at design time or programmatically to something bigger than Width, and when the user pulls down the box they will get a wider list of choices.
TComboBox
? What ItemWidth
property is it that you are talking about? learn.microsoft.com/en-us/search/… turns up nothing.
Jun 4, 2021 at 1:39