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I'm using the standard DateTimePicker in windows forms with a custom format of yyyyMM (the day is not relevant) and the ShowUpDown property set to true.

Using the up arrow to increase the month allows me to increase it from 12 to 1 (December to January) but doesn't increase the year. So the value in my DateTimePicker goes from 201812 to 201801 while I would expect it to show 201901.

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AFAIK, there's nothing out of the box to achieve this behavior. So, here's a workaround, it's a bit hacky but it works:

private DateTime LastDate;
private void dtPicker_ValueChanged(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
    DateTime newDate = dtPicker.Value;
    if (newDate.Year == LastDate.Year)
    {
        if (LastDate.Month == 12 && newDate.Month == 1)
            dtPicker.Value = dtPicker.Value.AddYears(1);
        else if (LastDate.Month == 1 && newDate.Month == 12)
            dtPicker.Value = dtPicker.Value.AddYears(-1);
    }

    LastDate = dtPicker.Value;
}

Since you have the ShowUpDown property set to true, the user will not be able to change the value in any other way. The only downside I can think of is when you change the value in your code, for example, if the current value is 201812 and you try to set it to 201801, you'll get 201901 instead. To prevent this from happening, you can remove the event handler before changing the value, and then re-add it right after:

dtPicker.ValueChanged -= dtPicker_ValueChanged;
dtPicker.Value = new DateTime(2018, 1, 1);
dtPicker.ValueChanged += dtPicker_ValueChanged;
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  • This works perfectly. I'll mark it as my accepted answer if nobody else can do it better in the next hour or so.
    – x1ras
    Aug 29, 2018 at 14:11

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