32

I have a basic property that stores an object of type Fruit:

Fruit food;
public Fruit Food
{
    get {return this.food;}
    set
    {
        this.food= value;
        this.RefreshDataBindings();
    }
}

public void RefreshDataBindings()
{
    this.textBox.DataBindings.Clear();
    this.textBox.DataBindings.Add("Text", this.Food, "Name");
}

So I set this.Food outside the form and then it shows up in the UI.

If I modify this.Food, it updates correctly. If I modify the UI programmatically like:

this.textBox.Text = "NewFruit", it doesn't update this.Food.

Why could this be? I also implemented INotifyPropertyChanged for Fruit.Name, but still the same.

4 Answers 4

60

I Recommend you implement INotifyPropertyChanged and change your databinding code to this:

this.textBox.DataBindings.Add("Text",
                                this.Food,
                                "Name",
                                false,
                                DataSourceUpdateMode.OnPropertyChanged);

That'll fix it.

Note that the default DataSourceUpdateMode is OnValidation, so if you don't specify OnPropertyChanged, the model object won't be updated until after your validations have occurred.

0
2

We can use following code

textBox1.DataBindings.Add("Text", model, "Name", false, DataSourceUpdateMode.OnPropertyChanged);

Where

  • "Text" – the property of textbox
  • model – the model object enter code here
  • "Name" – the value of model which to bind the textbox.
1

You need a bindingsource object to act as an intermediary and assist in the binding. Then instead of updating the user interface, update the underlining model.

var model = (Fruit) bindingSource1.DataSource;

model.FruitType = "oranges";

bindingSource.ResetBindings();

Read up on BindingSource and simple data binding for Windows Forms.

-4

You can't databind to a property and then explictly assign a value to the databound property.

4
  • Thanks, but why is this not possible? I thought it's 2 way?
    – Joan Venge
    Oct 23, 2009 at 21:34
  • Joan, that is the (much improved) binding in WPF. WinForms is relatively simple.
    – H H
    Oct 23, 2009 at 21:54
  • Thanks Henk, do you know how to achieve this in Winforms? I can't use wpf for this project unfortunately.
    – Joan Venge
    Oct 23, 2009 at 21:55
  • 6
    I believe the sentiment of this answer is, "You cannot simply databind to a property and then explicitly assign a value to the databound property and have the binding update the control", but the wording is a bit misleading. In the end, you can update the property, and you CAN implement the binding in a way to update the control (see the accepted answer). Dec 13, 2012 at 22:48

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