95

I have a ContextMenuStrip that is assigned to several different listboxes. I am trying to figure out when the ContextMenuStrip is clicked what ListBox it was used on. I tried the code below as a start but it is not working. The sender has the correct value, but when I try to assign it to the menuSubmitted it is null.

private void MenuViewDetails_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
    ContextMenu menuSubmitted = sender as ContextMenu;
    if (menuSubmitted != null)
    {
        Control sourceControl = menuSubmitted.SourceControl;
    }
}

Any help would be great. Thanks.

Using the assistance below, I figured it out:

private void MenuViewDetails_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
        {
            ToolStripMenuItem menuItem = sender as ToolStripMenuItem;
            if (menuItem != null)
            {
                ContextMenuStrip calendarMenu = menuItem.Owner as ContextMenuStrip;

                if (calendarMenu != null)
                {
                    Control controlSelected = calendarMenu.SourceControl;
                }
            }
        }
2
  • thanks for the solution i was looking for. i had the same problem. but i suggest not nesting all those if statements and using if (menuItem == null) return; if you are like me and don't want your code that handles it to be nested an extra needless 2 levels. Nov 12, 2013 at 20:15
  • 1
    It seems to me the solution you provide could be coded more concisely: Control controlSelected = ((sender as ToolStripMenuItem)?.Owner as ContextMenuStrip)?.SourceControl;
    – Stewart
    Apr 30, 2021 at 15:57

6 Answers 6

140

For a ContextMenu:

The problem is that the sender parameter points to the item on the context menu that was clicked, not the context menu itself.

It's a simple fix, though, because each MenuItem exposes a GetContextMenu method that will tell you which ContextMenu contains that menu item.

Change your code to the following:

private void MenuViewDetails_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
    // Try to cast the sender to a MenuItem
    MenuItem menuItem = sender as MenuItem;
    if (menuItem != null)
    {
        // Retrieve the ContextMenu that contains this MenuItem
        ContextMenu menu = menuItem.GetContextMenu();

        // Get the control that is displaying this context menu
        Control sourceControl = menu.SourceControl;
    }
}

For a ContextMenuStrip:

It does change things slightly if you use a ContextMenuStrip instead of a ContextMenu. The two controls are not related to one another, and an instance of one cannot be casted to an instance of the other.

As before, the item that was clicked is still returned in the sender parameter, so you will have to determine the ContextMenuStrip that owns this individual menu item. You do that with the Owner property. Finally, you'll use the SourceControl property to determine which control is displaying the context menu.

Modify your code like so:

private void MenuViewDetails_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
     // Try to cast the sender to a ToolStripItem
     ToolStripItem menuItem = sender as ToolStripItem;
     if (menuItem != null)
     {
        // Retrieve the ContextMenuStrip that owns this ToolStripItem
        ContextMenuStrip owner = menuItem.Owner as ContextMenuStrip;
        if (owner != null)
        {
           // Get the control that is displaying this context menu
           Control sourceControl = owner.SourceControl;
        }
     }
 }
8
  • 2
    @bluefeet: I've updated the code in my answer. There's a big difference between the ContextMenu and ContextMenuStrip. (Ah, and I see you've already figured it out. Well, all the better to learn things on your own!) Feb 3, 2011 at 13:20
  • 2
    I used the Opening event to record the SourceControl that opened the menu to a local variable, and then referenced that when handling item clicks. Jun 8, 2017 at 16:22
  • 1
    @QuickDanger Yeah, SourceControl is sadly null at the moment a Click event of a ToolStripItem sub-item of ContextMenuStrip is fired. It seems that the ContextMenuStrip's Closed event fires before that Click event, which is probably what causes the problem; I assume the property is cleared after the menu 'closes'.
    – Nyerguds
    Jun 2, 2018 at 13:23
  • 1
    @CodyGray Actually, if the tree is deeper you have to loop up the chain of OwnerItem properties until you find a ToolStripItem that has a ContextMenuStrip in its Owner property. But as I just commented, it doesn't work; the SourceControl on the context menu will be null. You said you can't reproduce it though... maybe the problem only occurs with menus deeper than one level? Mine was two sub-levels deep.
    – Nyerguds
    Jun 2, 2018 at 13:34
  • 1
    It might be a good idea to make something like this into an extension method
    – jrh
    Jun 7, 2018 at 17:08
5

I had great difficulty getting any of this code to work. This is the simplest solution I could find:

For A ContextMenuStrip:

    Control _sourceControl = null;
    private void contextMenuStrip_Opened(object sender, EventArgs e)
    {
        _sourceControl = contextMenuStrip.SourceControl;
    }

    private void contextMenuItem_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
    {
        var menuItem = (ToolStripMenuItem)sender;

        _sourceControl.Text = menuItem.Text;
        MessageBox.Show(menuItem.Name);
        MessageBox.Show(sourceControl.Name);
    }
0
4

Older post, but in case someone like myself comes across it:

For a ContextMenuStrip, the above didn't work for me, but it led to finding what did.

void DeleteMenu_ItemClicked(object sender, ToolStripItemClickedEventArgs e)
{
    ContextMenuStrip menu = sender as ContextMenuStrip;
    Control sourceControl = menu.SourceControl;
    MessageBox.Show(sourceControl.Name);
}

This gave me the expected control's name. You can put in validation etc with if statements, I'm just posting to get to the point.

1
  • This only works with the direct items in a ContextMenu. The problem is that ItemClicked doesn't fire when clicking sub-menu items; they need their own Click event which would have the item itself as sender, not the menu.
    – Nyerguds
    Jun 2, 2018 at 13:26
3

Cast sender to ToolStripItem to reach Owner which will be a ToolStrip that doesn't have a SourceControl property.

Cast Owner to ContextMenuStrip to reach SourceControl.

Control sc = ((ContextMenuStrip)((ToolStripItem)sender).Owner).SourceControl;
1

How about just using ActiveForm.ActiveControl, in this example from a C1 grid:

C1.Win.FlexGrid.C1FlexGrid fg = frmMain.ActiveForm.ActiveControl as C1.Win.FlexGrid.C1FlexGrid;
0

The easiest solution would be:

Control parentControl = ((sender as MenuItem).GetContextMenu()).SourceControl;
 

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