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;