You can use the something like this
DataGridView dg = ...;
var rowCount = dg.Rows.GetRowCount(DataGridViewElementStates.Visible) -
(dg.NewRowIndex >= 0 ? 1 : 0);
I've tested it in both bound and unbound mode and it works correctly. Btw, I wasn't able to reproduce the special case you mentioned - IsNewRow
property was always returning a correct value.
Here is my test code:
//#define fBoundMode
using System;
using System.ComponentModel;
using System.Windows.Forms;
namespace Samples
{
static class Program
{
[STAThread]
static void Main()
{
Application.EnableVisualStyles();
Application.SetCompatibleTextRenderingDefault(false);
var form = new Form();
var dg = new DataGridView { Dock = DockStyle.Fill, Parent = form };
#if fBoundMode
dg.DataSource = new BindingList<Data>();
#else
dg.Columns.Add("Foo", "Foo");
dg.Columns.Add("Bar", "Bar");
#endif
var status = new Label { Dock = DockStyle.Bottom, AutoSize = false, Parent = form };
var timer = new Timer { Interval = 250, Enabled = true };
timer.Tick += (sender, e) =>
{
var rowCount = dg.Rows.GetRowCount(DataGridViewElementStates.Visible) - (dg.NewRowIndex >= 0 ? 1 : 0);
status.Text = "Rows: " + rowCount;
};
Application.Run(form);
}
#if fBoundMode
class Data
{
public string Foo { get; set; }
public string Bar { get; set; }
}
#endif
}
}
UPDATE: As for the special case (which you should have clearly provided from the beginning - event now it's not clear until one hits the code example, and I don't think this site is a place for puzzles) I find it very exceptional and the "correct" solution provided in your own answer
rowCount = dg.Rows.Count - (dg.AllowUserToAddRows? 1 : 0);
may work for your specific needs, but cannot be used as a general advice (which it seems to pretend to be) because apparently doesn't work with invisible rows or bound mode to a data source with AddNew disabled, as you may see in the example below:
//#define fBoundMode
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.ComponentModel;
using System.Windows.Forms;
namespace Samples
{
static class Program
{
[STAThread]
static void Main()
{
Application.EnableVisualStyles();
Application.SetCompatibleTextRenderingDefault(false);
var form = new Form();
var dg = new DataGridView { Dock = DockStyle.Fill, Parent = form };
#if fBoundMode
dg.DataSource = new BindingList<Data>(new List<Data> { new Data { Foo = "a" }, new Data { Foo = "b" } }) { AllowNew = false };
#else
dg.Columns.Add("Foo", "Foo");
dg.Columns.Add("Bar", "Bar");
dg.Rows.Add("a", "a");
dg.Rows.Add("b", "b");
dg.Rows.Add("c", "c");
dg.Rows[1].Visible = false;
#endif
var status = new Label { Dock = DockStyle.Bottom, AutoSize = false, Parent = form };
Action updateStatus = () =>
{
var rowCount = dg.Rows.Count - (dg.AllowUserToAddRows ? 1 : 0);
status.Text = "Rows: " + rowCount;
};
dg.UserDeletedRow += (sender, e) => updateStatus();
var timer = new Timer { Interval = 250, Enabled = true };
timer.Tick += (sender, e) => updateStatus();
Application.Run(form);
}
#if fBoundMode
class Data
{
public string Foo { get; set; }
public string Bar { get; set; }
}
#endif
}
}
I personally think the case you mentioned is not "by design", but rather than a result of some technical (implementation) difficulties. As being such, I would rather treat is as exception (with special code) rather than trying to generalize it. But that's up to you - I'm definitely not going to spend more time on this .
NewRowIndex
of datagridview andIsNewRow
of row to find out if a row is new row. I couldn't reproduce an abnormal behavior.