• 0

Formatting a listview item


Question

Hey people!

I have pulled information from an access table into a listview item within Visual Basic 2010. It displays all the information, field by field how I want it...however one of the fields has a lot of text. It stops after the specified lenght with ... suggesting there is more text that doesn't fit. I have used "-2" to make it longer, but then it's too long. Also scrolling wouldn't be very nice.

I'd like it to display the information from the field on two lines, but I can't figure it out. Here's my existing text (without the dims as I've made it flat at the moment)


objConnection = CreateObject("ADODB.Connection")
objRecordset = CreateObject("ADODB.Recordset")
dbasename = "D:\technicianmanagement.MDB"
tblname = "FaultCalls"
objConnection.Open("Provider = Microsoft.Jet.OLEDB.4.0; Data Source = " & dbasename)
objRecordset.Open("SELECT * FROM " & tblname & " ORDER BY DATEREP DESC, TIMEREP DESC", objConnection, adOpenStatic, _
adLockOptimistic)

lvref.Clear()
lvref.View = View.Details
lvref.Columns.Add("Ref", 40, HorizontalAlignment.Left)
lvref.Columns.Add("User", 75, HorizontalAlignment.Left)
lvref.Columns.Add("Asset", 100, HorizontalAlignment.Left)
lvref.Columns.Add("Fault", -2, HorizontalAlignment.Left)
lvref.Columns.Add("Assigned", 75, HorizontalAlignment.Left)
lvref.Columns.Add("Date", 50, HorizontalAlignment.Left)
lvref.Columns.Add("Time", 75, HorizontalAlignment.Left)
lvref.Columns.Add("Email", 40, HorizontalAlignment.Left)

Do While Not objRecordset.EOF

MyListText(0) = sID
MyListText(1) = sUser
MyListText(2) = sAsset
MyListText(3) = sFault
MyListText(4) = sAssigned
MyListText(5) = sDate
MyListText(6) = sTime
If sEmail = True Then MyListText(7) = "Yes" Else MyListText(7) = "No"
MyListItem = New ListViewItem(MyListText)
lvref.Items.Add(MyListItem)
objRecordset.MoveNext()
Loop
[/CODE]

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/1059766-formatting-a-listview-item/
Share on other sites

9 answers to this question

Recommended Posts

  • 0

The problem is that the included listview control does not support multiple lines. (sorry) The general view is that the user will expand the column so that they can see the entire text.

I did a quick search and there are comments about 3rd party controls that allow multi line, but this is an unstandard pattern so be aware.

Sorry I can't give you the answer you wanted. I would really rethink the amount of data that you are showing.

  • 0

Hey people!

I have pulled information from an access table into a listview item within Visual Basic 2010. It displays all the information, field by field how I want it...however one of the fields has a lot of text. It stops after the specified lenght with ... suggesting there is more text that doesn't fit. I have used "-2" to make it longer, but then it's too long. Also scrolling wouldn't be very nice.

I'd like it to display the information from the field on two lines, but I can't figure it out. Here's my existing text (without the dims as I've made it flat at the moment)


objConnection = CreateObject("ADODB.Connection")
objRecordset = CreateObject("ADODB.Recordset")
dbasename = "D:\technicianmanagement.MDB"
tblname = "FaultCalls"
objConnection.Open("Provider = Microsoft.Jet.OLEDB.4.0; Data Source = " & dbasename)
objRecordset.Open("SELECT * FROM " & tblname & " ORDER BY DATEREP DESC, TIMEREP DESC", objConnection, adOpenStatic, _
adLockOptimistic)

lvref.Clear()
lvref.View = View.Details
lvref.Columns.Add("Ref", 40, HorizontalAlignment.Left)
lvref.Columns.Add("User", 75, HorizontalAlignment.Left)
lvref.Columns.Add("Asset", 100, HorizontalAlignment.Left)
lvref.Columns.Add("Fault", -2, HorizontalAlignment.Left)
lvref.Columns.Add("Assigned", 75, HorizontalAlignment.Left)
lvref.Columns.Add("Date", 50, HorizontalAlignment.Left)
lvref.Columns.Add("Time", 75, HorizontalAlignment.Left)
lvref.Columns.Add("Email", 40, HorizontalAlignment.Left)

Do While Not objRecordset.EOF

MyListText(0) = sID
MyListText(1) = sUser
MyListText(2) = sAsset
MyListText(3) = sFault
MyListText(4) = sAssigned
MyListText(5) = sDate
MyListText(6) = sTime
If sEmail = True Then MyListText(7) = "Yes" Else MyListText(7) = "No"
MyListItem = New ListViewItem(MyListText)
lvref.Items.Add(MyListItem)
objRecordset.MoveNext()
Loop
[/CODE]

Not sure why you dont use DataGridView.

you can do DataGridView.Columns.Add([font=monospace]"Ref") [/font]DataGridView.Columns.Add([font=monospace]"User") [/font]DataGridView.Columns.Add([font=monospace]"Asset")[/font] etc.

[font=monospace]and then for the items you can do DataGridView.Rows.Add([/font]sID, sUser, sAsset, ...)

p.s. my VB.NET skills are rusty as I've been doing C# for a while now so ignore semicolons where not required ;p

  • 0


objConnection = CreateObject("ADODB.Connection")
objRecordset = CreateObject("ADODB.Recordset")
dbasename = "D:\technicianmanagement.MDB"
tblname = "FaultCalls"
objConnection.Open("Provider = Microsoft.Jet.OLEDB.4.0; Data Source = " & dbasename)
objRecordset.Open("SELECT * FROM " & tblname & " ORDER BY DATEREP DESC, TIMEREP DESC", objConnection, adOpenStatic, adLockOptimistic)

DataGridView1.Columns.Clear()
DataGridView1.Columns.Add("Ref", "Ref")
DataGridView1.Columns.Add("User", "User")
DataGridView1.Columns.Add("Asset", "Asset")
DataGridView1.Columns.Add("Fault", "Fault")
DataGridView1.Columns.Add("Assigned", "Assigned")
DataGridView1.Columns.Add("Date", "Date")
DataGridView1.Columns.Add("Time", "Time")
DataGridView1.Columns.Add("Email", "Email")

' Makes the form stretch to show all the columns that are visible.
Me.Width = DataGridView1.Columns.GetColumnsWidth(DataGridViewElementStates.Visible) + 60

' Clear all current rows of data.
DataGridView1.Rows.Clear()

Do While Not objRecordset.EOF
' You would probably want to do something like this... I put an in-line if statement to shrink the amount of code needed.
' The first parameter if If() is the expression, second is what to do if it is true and the third is what to do if it is false.
DataGridView1.Rows.Add(sID, sUser, sAsset, sFault, sAssigned, sDate, sTime, If(sEmail, "Yes", "No"))
Loop
[/CODE]

That should help you along.

Or... for more column size control etc.

[CODE]
objConnection = CreateObject("ADODB.Connection")
objRecordset = CreateObject("ADODB.Recordset")
dbasename = "D:\technicianmanagement.MDB"
tblname = "FaultCalls"
objConnection.Open("Provider = Microsoft.Jet.OLEDB.4.0; Data Source = " & dbasename)
objRecordset.Open("SELECT * FROM " & tblname & " ORDER BY DATEREP DESC, TIMEREP DESC", objConnection, adOpenStatic, adLockOptimistic)

DataGridView1.Columns.Clear()

Dim DGVC(7) As DataGridViewTextBoxColumn
DGVC(0) = New DataGridViewTextBoxColumn
DGVC(0).HeaderText = "Ref"
DGVC(0).Name = "Ref"
DGVC(0).Width = 40
DGVC(1) = New DataGridViewTextBoxColumn
DGVC(1).HeaderText = "User"
DGVC(1).Name = "User"
DGVC(1).Width = 75
DGVC(2) = New DataGridViewTextBoxColumn
DGVC(2).HeaderText = "Asset"
DGVC(2).Name = "Asset"
DGVC(2).Width = 100
DGVC(3) = New DataGridViewTextBoxColumn
DGVC(3).HeaderText = "Fault"
DGVC(3).Name = "Fault"
DGVC(3).Width = 140
DGVC(4) = New DataGridViewTextBoxColumn
DGVC(4).HeaderText = "Assigned"
DGVC(4).Name = "Assigned"
DGVC(4).Width = 75
DGVC(5) = New DataGridViewTextBoxColumn
DGVC(5).HeaderText = "Date"
DGVC(5).Name = "Date"
DGVC(5).Width = 50
DGVC(6) = New DataGridViewTextBoxColumn
DGVC(6).HeaderText = "Time"
DGVC(6).Name = "Time"
DGVC(6).Width = 75
DGVC(7) = New DataGridViewTextBoxColumn
DGVC(7).HeaderText = "Email"
DGVC(7).Name = "Email"
DGVC(7).Width = 40
DataGridView1.Columns.AddRange(DGVC)

' Makes the form stretch to show all the columns that are visible.
Me.Width = DataGridView1.Columns.GetColumnsWidth(DataGridViewElementStates.Visible) + 60

' Clear all current rows of data.
DataGridView1.Rows.Clear()

Do While Not objRecordset.EOF
' You would probably want to do something like this... I put an in-line if statement to shrink the amount of code needed.
' The first parameter if If() is the expression, second is what to do if it is true and the third is what to do if it is false.
DataGridView1.Rows.Add(sID, sUser, sAsset, sFault, sAssigned, sDate, sTime, If(sEmail, "Yes", "No"))
Loop
[/CODE]

post-20891-0-97936800-1330062215.png

Edited by FuhrerDarqueSyde
  • 0

I decided against a DataGraidView for asthetics.

I found this command:

lvref.AutoResizeColumns(ColumnHeaderAutoResizeStyle.ColumnContent)[/CODE]

This resizes the field how I want, but again its too long. :(

Also, thanks for the help. I have added a datagridview for testing and comparison. Is there either way to make the datagridview or listview grow/shrink but keep ratios and autosize if the user resizes the form?

So if I resize the form, the text will go onto new lines, rather than the user having to use the scroll bar to view obscured text.

  • 0

Auto-Resizing: Me.DataGridView1.AutoSizeColumnsMode = DataGridViewAutoSizeColumnsMode.AllCells

Wrapping: Me.DataGridView1.RowsDefaultCellStyle.WrapMode = DataGridViewTriState.True

Useful?

(Also, you say you've gone against the DGV for Aesthetics... you can style them to look identical to a list view if you so wished... but imo you can make them look an awful lot better too!)

  • 0

That's worked on some, but not all cells.

Is there any way to get it working for the rows too?

I have tried:

Me.dgvfaults.AutoResizeRowsMode = DataGridViewAutoSizeRowsMode.AllCells[/CODE]

But that didn't work, as it says "'AutoResizeRowsMode' is not a member of 'System.Windows.Forms.DataGridView'"

Attached is what it looks like at the moment, but I'd like it so that it will resize with the form. Meaning it'll add extra lines if needed and shove the teext down.

post-395128-0-02155200-1330090307_thumb.

  • 0

After the loop can't you just do.


lvref.Columns(3).Width = -1
[/CODE]

That should resize it to the largest data item in the column. You may be able to set it to -1 before the loop and then it will do it as the data is added. My VB is very rusty so I can't remember exactly how it works (so rusty I could be way off as well)

  • 0

I've just programmed my first VB.NET in 2 years... here's a simple implementation of a ListBox with custom drawn mutli line items. Use it as you like...

(something went wrong, the attachment is attached twice)

OmgPonies.zip

OmgPonies.zip

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • I always thought the moon gets a lot of impact because there’s no atmosphere, so surely building a moon base is only going to end in disaster?
    • Gets them every time !  
    • This piece of ###### is probably one of the most hated apps that ever existed.
    • Microsoft is bringing a much-needed Recap app to Teams, here is a first look by Usama Jawad Microsoft Teams is heavily used in work and school environments, and perhaps one of its core but extremely useful features is the ability to record meetings. In past years, Microsoft has further improved upon this functionality by integrating AI, but you do need a Microsoft 365 Copilot license to leverage most, if not all, all of those capabilities. Now, the Redmond tech firm is making another significant enhancement in the area of Teams meeting recordings. Up until now, if you wanted to access Teams recordings, you had to arduously locate the meeting invite and navigate to the dedicated tab, or go to the cloud storage location such as a SharePoint site. This was a rather overwhelming activity, especially if you don't remember the name of the meeting or the meeting occurred quite a while ago. Microsoft is now attempting to solve this problem through a dedicated Recap app that consolidates all your recordings. This centralized experience will allow users to find all recordings from the past 30 days and also offer access to other related services such as transcripts and AI-powered summaries. Customers will have the option to search for recordings, filter them, and review multiple meetings by generating AI-powered podcast-style recaps. The Recap app will list all available recordings in both thumbnail and list views. The former is shown below: And here is how Teams users with a Microsoft 365 Copilot license can select multiple recordings to generate a podcast-style audio recap: Microsoft has emphasized that the Recap app is pre-installed in Teams but it will not be pinned by default. Users will able to navigate to the Teams app store from the left rail, and pin it from the apps section. It will be enabled by default for all users once it becomes available. It's worth noting that while Teams recordings and transcripts can be accessed by all users governed by existing permissions, AI-powered features like intelligent summaries, audio recaps, and video recaps will require a Microsoft 365 Copilot license. The Recap app will be generally available to Teams users on Windows, Mac, and the web by the end of next month, with mobile support coming soon.
    • It's so stupid that you have to "enroll" in these extended updates.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      tuben earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • First Post
      OffsetAbs earned a badge
      First Post
    • Reacting Well
      OffsetAbs earned a badge
      Reacting Well
    • First Post
      Kolakid60 earned a badge
      First Post
    • Week One Done
      xvvxcvv earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      427
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      184
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      150
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      71
    5. 5
      FloatingFatMan
      71
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!