I would like to know why are there 2 different ways of clearing out a listview. One is by calling listview.clear
and other is listview.items.clear
. Actually, this extends to many other VCL components too. which method must be used and why?
2 Answers
ListView.Clear
is just a wrapper around ListView.Items.Clear
with ListItems.BeginUpdate
/ListItems.EndUpdate
. look at the source:
procedure TCustomListView.Clear;
begin
FListItems.BeginUpdate;
try
FListItems.Clear;
finally
FListItems.EndUpdate;
end;
end;
From the docs:
The BeginUpdate method suspends screen repainting until the EndUpdate method is called. Use BeginUpdate to speed processing and avoid flicker while items are added to or deleted from a collection.
A better practice is to use BeginUpdate
/EndUpdate
for speed and avoiding flicker.
But the main reason to use ListView.Clear
is because using a "high-level VCL methods" (As well commented by @Arnaud) is always a good idea, and the implementation might change (BTW, the method was introduced in D7).
EDIT: I have tested the TListView
with 10k Items (D7/WinXP):
ListView.Items.Clear
: ~5500 msListView.Clear
: ~330 ms
Conclusion: ListView.Clear
is about 16 times faster than ListView.Items.Clear
when BeginUpdate
/EndUpdate
is not used!
-
2Actually, I don't think that
BeginUpdate
..EndUpdate
is of any help in the case ofclear
. Apr 16, 2012 at 7:20 -
7@Smasher Since
clear
release each object, it will notify each deletion to the VCL, unless theBeginUpdate / EndUpdate
is used. This is the difference between the two, and whyClear
is much faster thanItems.Clear
. It is always a good idea to call directly the high-level VCL methods, instead of going into the internal plumbing, unless you know exactly what you are doing. Apr 16, 2012 at 9:34 -
2@ArnaudBouchez, +1 for "high-level VCL methods". that was exactly the expression I was looking for.– kobikApr 16, 2012 at 9:42
ListView.Clear
is a convenience method that calls ListView.Items.Clear
internally. There is no semantic difference no matter which of the two you call.
I prefer the first one because it is shorter and it doesn't show the internal representation which is of no interest for me at this point.
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I expect no performance issue. The one just calls the other with the
BeginUpdate
..EndUpdate
not making a difference in this case (imho). Apr 16, 2012 at 7:21 -
4
-
6-1 for saying it is a mere convenience method without any other difference. There is clearly a difference. Apr 16, 2012 at 12:10