1 / 47

Programming Interface Controls with VB.Net

Programming Interface Controls with VB.Net. User Interface Controls. Form MessageBox Common Controls: Button, TextBox, MaskedTextBox, List Box, Option Button, Check Box, CheckedListBox, numericUpDown Container controls: GroupBox, etc. Others: Timer ToolTip Components. Form.

vickihodges
Télécharger la présentation

Programming Interface Controls with VB.Net

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Programming Interface Controls with VB.Net

  2. User Interface Controls • Form • MessageBox • Common Controls: • Button, TextBox, MaskedTextBox, List Box, Option Button, Check Box, CheckedListBox, numericUpDown • Container controls: • GroupBox, etc. • Others: • Timer • ToolTip • Components

  3. Form • Form is defined as a class. • Methods: • Show, ShowDialog: Open a form • Activate, Focus: Make an opened form get focus • Hide, Close • Ex. • Me.Hide, Me.Close Note: Closing a form is equivalent to delete a form. • Events: • Load, Activated, DeActivate, Closing, Closed

  4. Multiple Forms Two forms: Form1, Form2 To Open Form2 from Form1: Standard but troublesome way to open a form: Must create an instance of the form class by using the keyword New to access the form. Dim f2 As New Form2() f2.Show() Open Form2 as a Modal form: f2.ShowDialog() .

  5. Modeless form: Other forms can receive input focus while this form remains active. • FormName.Show() • Modal form: No other form can receive focus while this form remains active. • FormName.ShowDialog() • Demo: Problem with the Show method

  6. Using the Default Instances of Forms to Open a Form • formName.Show, formName.ShowDialog • Always bring up the same underlying default instance of the form. • Example: Form2.ShowDialog

  7. Control StartUp Form • Click: • Project/Properties/Application/StartUp Form • Then select the form

  8. SharingVariables Among Forms • Define these variables with project-level scope in a module using the Public keyword: • Module Module1 • Public testVar As Integer • End Module • Note: Use Project/Add Module to add a module.

  9. Modules • A file contains code such as: • Variable declarations • Procedures and functions • Variables and procedures used by more than one form should store in a module. • Global variables: Public

  10. MessageBox MessageBox.Show(message) MessageBox.Show(message, Caption) MessageBox.Show(message, Caption, Buttons) Note: 1. In each format, arguments are positional and required. 2. This object returns a DialogResult data type. Possible values for a DialogResult data type are: Abort, Cancel, Ignore, No, None, OK, ReTry, and Yes. To test the return value: Dim ReturnVal as DialogResult ReturnVal=MessageBox(“hello”, …..) If ReturnVal=DialogResult.OK…

  11. Form Closing Event Example Private Sub Form10_FormClosing(ByVal sender As Object, ByVal e As System.Windows.Forms.FormClosingEventArgs) Handles Me.FormClosing If MessageBox.Show("Are you sure?", "Warning", MessageBoxButtons.YesNo) = DialogResult.Yes Then e.Cancel = False Else e.Cancel = True End If End Sub Note: Event procedure arguments: sender: object that triggers the event. e: event object

  12. Text Box • Useful properties • BackColor, BorderStyle • ReadOnly • Enable • Visible • Password Character • Multiline • ScrollBar • Text • Useful events • TextChanged: default event • Validating – useful for validating data entered in the box

  13. Input Validation • Numbers are checked to ensure they are: • Within a range of possible values • Reasonableness • Not causing problems such as division by 0. • Containing only digits • IsNumeric • Texts are checked to ensure correct format. • Phone #, SSN. • Required field • Textbox: • Set CauseValidation property to true. • Use the Validating event: • Triggered just before the focus shifts to other control.

  14. TextBox Validating Event Private Sub TextBox1_Validating(ByVal sender As Object, ByVal e As System.ComponentModel.CancelEventArgs) Handles TextBox1.Validating If Not IsNumeric(TextBox1.Text) Then e.Cancel = True MessagBox.Show("enter digits only") Else MessageBox.Show("good") End If End Sub Note: Why not use the TextChanged event?

  15. String Methods • ToUpper, ToLower • Length – Number of characters • TrimStart, TrimEnd, Trim • Substring(Start), Substring(Start, length) • IndexOf(SearchString), IndexOf(SearchString, Start) • 0 based index • Case-sensitive • eName=“David” • Position=eName.IndexOf(“d”) • Return –1 if the searchString is not found. • Note: Text property of a Textbox has all the string methods. • Ex. TextBox1.Text.Substring(0,2)

  16. Example: Extract the firstname and the lastname from a fullname • Dim indexSpace As Integer • Dim firstName, lastName As String • indexSpace = TextBox1.Text.IndexOf(" ") • firstName = TextBox1.Text.Substring(0, indexSpace) • lastName = TextBox1.Text.Substring(indexSpace + 1) • MessageBox.Show(firstName) • MessageBox.Show(lastName)

  17. Validate SSN Format Private Sub TextBox1_Validating(ByVal sender As Object, ByVal e As System.ComponentModel.CancelEventArgs) Handles TextBox1.Validating Dim correct As Boolean = True If Not IsNumeric(TextBox1.Text.Substring(0, 3)) Or _ Not IsNumeric(TextBox1.Text.Substring(4, 2)) Or _ Not IsNumeric(TextBox1.Text.Substring(7, 4)) Then correct = False End If If TextBox1.Text.Substring(3, 1) <> "-" Or TextBox1.Text.Substring(6, 1) <> "-" Then correct = False End If If correct Then MessageBox.Show("perfect format") Else e.Cancel = True MessageBox.Show("not correct format") End If End Sub

  18. Group Box • It is a container control. • Controls in a Group Box should move with the box.

  19. Radio Button • Radio buttons must be grouped together inside a container such as a GroupBox or a form. • When the user selects an option all other options in the same group are deselected. • Properties: • Checked: True/False. • Default button: Set the Checked property to true at the design time. • Events: • CheckedChanged

  20. RadioButton Example If radioButton1.Checked=true then textbox1.text=“You select radio button 1” ElseIf radioButton2.Checked=true then textbox1.text=“You select radio button 2” Else textbox1.text=“You select radio button 3” End If

  21. Check Box • Check boxes do not belong to a group even when they are grouped in a Group Box. • Checked property and checkedChangedevent

  22. Check Box Example 1 Private Sub CheckBox1_CheckedChanged(ByVal sender As System.Object, ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles CheckBox1.CheckedChanged If CheckBox1.Checked = True Then MessageBox.Show(“check chk1") Else MessageBox.Show("uncheck chk1") End If End Sub

  23. Check Box Example 2 Dim msg as String Msg=“You choose “ If checkBox1.checked=true then msg=msg & “check box 1” End If If checkBox2.checked=true then msg=msg & “check box 2” End If If checkBox3.checked=true then msg=msg & “check box 3” End If Note: Cannot put these three conditions in a If …ElseIf block.

  24. List Box • Useful properties • Items: The items in the listBox. It is a collection strcture. Items can be entered at the design time or entered in code. • 0-based index • SelectionMode: one or multi selection • SelectedItem(s) • MultiColumn • Methods • Add • Clear • Event: SelectedIndexChange

  25. List Box Example Private Sub Form1_Load(ByVal sender As Object, ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles MyBase.Load TextBox1.Clear() TextBox2.Clear() ListBox1.Items.Clear() ListBox1.Items.Add("Apple") ListBox1.Items.Add("Orange") ListBox1.Items.Add("Banana") ListBox1.Items.Add("Strawberry") TextBox2.Text = ListBox1.Items.Count.ToString End Sub Private Sub ListBox1_SelectedIndexChanged(ByVal sender As System.Object, ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles ListBox1.SelectedIndexChanged TextBox1.Text = ListBox1.SelectedItem End Sub

  26. List Items Collections • Methods: • ADD: ListBox1.Items.Add("Apple") • Item: Retrieve an object from Items • ListBox1.Items.Item(Index) or ListBox1.Items(Index) • 0-based index • Insert: ListBox.Items.Insert(Index, item) • Remove: Delete an object with a position index or key. • ListBox.Items.Remove(Item) • ListBox.Items.RemoveAt(Index) • Clear: ListBox.Items.Clear() • Count: Return the number of objects in a collection. • ListBox.Items.Count

  27. Selected Item’s Value • Demo: • Select interest rate from a list box: • 5% -> 0.05 • Dim intRate As Double • Select Case ListBox1.SelectedItem • Case "5% " • intRate = 0.05 • Case “6%” • intRate = 0.06 • Case “7%” • intRate = 0.07 • End Select

  28. Structured Error Handling Try result = Val(TextBox1.Text) / Val(TextBox2.Text) TextBox3.Text = result.ToString Catch except As DivideByZeroException MessageBox.Show(except.Message) Catch except As Exception MessageBox.Show(except.Message) Finally MessageBox.Show("I get exdecuted, no matter what") End Try

  29. Using One Event Procedure to Handle Many Events Private Sub BtnClick(ByVal sender As System.Object, ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles Button1.Click, Button2.Click, Button3.Click If sender.name = "Button1" Then MessageBox.Show("btn 1") ElseIf sender.name = "Button2" Then MessageBox.Show("Btn2") Else MessageBox.Show("btn3") End If End Sub Note 1: Controls’ Tag property Note 2: Late binding

  30. Programming Interface Controls with C#

  31. Working with Form • To close a form: • this.Close(); • To choose the startup form:Change the code in Program.cs • Example, to start from form2 instead of form1, use this code: • Application.Run(new Form2());

  32. Form Closing Event private void Form2_FormClosing(object sender, FormClosingEventArgs e) { if (MessageBox.Show("Are you sure?", "Warning", MessageBoxButtons.YesNo) == DialogResult.Yes) { e.Cancel = false; } else { e.Cancel = true; } }

  33. TextBox Validating EventExample: Testing for digits only There is no equivalent IsNumeric function in C#. This example uses the Double.Parse method trying to convert the data entered in the box to double. If fail then it is not numeric. private void textBox1_Validating(object sender, CancelEventArgs e) { try { Double.Parse(textBox1.Text); e.Cancel = false; } catch { e.Cancel = true; MessageBox.Show("Enter digits only"); } }

  34. Extract First Name and Last Name int indexSpace; string firstName, lastName ; indexSpace = textBox2.Text.IndexOf(" "); firstName = textBox2.Text.Substring(0, indexSpace); lastName = textBox2.Text.Substring(indexSpace + 1); MessageBox.Show(firstName); MessageBox.Show(lastName);

  35. Creating a Boolean MyIsNumeric Function private Boolean MyIsNumeric(string s) { try { Double.Parse(s); return true; } catch { return false; } }

  36. Using MyIsNumeric Function to Vaidate SSN Format private void button3_Click(object sender, EventArgs e) { bool correct = true; if (! MyIsNumeric(textBox2.Text.Substring(0, 3)) || ! MyIsNumeric(textBox2.Text.Substring(4, 2)) || ! MyIsNumeric(textBox2.Text.Substring(7, 4)) ) { correct = false; } if (textBox2.Text.Substring(3, 1) != "-" || textBox2.Text.Substring(6, 1) != "-" ) { correct = false; } if (correct) { MessageBox.Show("perfect format"); } else { MessageBox.Show("not correct format"); } }

  37. Working with Radiobuttons, Listbox • Create a form with 2 radiobuttons. When radiobutton1 is selected, populate a listbox with fruit names.; otherwise populate the listbox with vegetable names. Then, dsplay the fruit or vegetable’s name in a textbox when user select an item from the listbox.

  38. private void radioButton1_CheckedChanged(object sender, EventArgs e) { if (radioButton1.Checked) { listBox1.Items.Clear(); listBox1.Items.Add("Apple"); listBox1.Items.Add("Orange"); listBox1.Items.Add("Banana"); listBox1.Items.Add("Strawberry"); listBox1.Items.Add("Papaya"); } if (radioButton2.Checked) { listBox1.Items.Clear(); listBox1.Items.Add("Spinach"); listBox1.Items.Add("Brocoli"); listBox1.Items.Add("Tomato"); listBox1.Items.Add("Lettuce"); listBox1.Items.Add("Cabbage"); } } private void listBox1_SelectedIndexChanged(object sender, EventArgs e) { textBox1.Text = listBox1.SelectedItem.ToString(); }

  39. Create a Loan Payment Form

  40. Using VB.Net’s PMT Function • Add a reference to Microsoft Visual Baisc • From the Solution Explorer, right-click the References node, then click Add Reference • From the .Net tab, select Microsoft Visual Baisc • Add this code to the form: • using Microsoft.VisualBasic;

  41. private void button1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e) { double loan, term, rate, payment; loan = Double.Parse(textBox1.Text); if (radioButton1.Checked) { term = 15; } else { term = 30; } switch (listBox1.SelectedIndex) { case 0: rate=.05; break; case 1: rate=.06; break; case 2: rate = .07; break; case 3: rate = .08; break; case 4: rate = .09; break; default: rate = 0.05; break; } payment = Financial.Pmt(rate / 12, term * 12, -loan); textBox2.Text = payment.ToString(); }

  42. How to Use VB’s IsNumeric Function • Add a reference to Microsoft VisualBasic Compatibility namespace. • Then, add this code to the form: • using Microsoft.VisualBasic; • Microsoft.VisualBasic.Information class contains the IsNumeric function if (! Information.IsNumeric(textBox1.Text)) { e.Cancel = true; MessageBox.Show("Enter digits only"); } else { e.Cancel=false; }

  43. ComboBox • Allows the user to type text directly into the combo box. • Use the Text property to get entered item: • ComboBox1.Text • The index for an entered item is –1. • Search an item in the list: ComboBox1.Items.IndexOf(“search text”) • Found: return the index of the search text. • Not found: return –1. • How to add an entered item to the list?

  44. ToolTip • Add ToolTip to form. • Use controls’ ToolTipOn property to enter tip.

  45. Timer • Properties: • Enabled -- must set to True. • Interval • Tick Event private void timer1_Tick(object sender, EventArgs e) { textBox1.Text = System.DateTime.Now.ToString(); }

  46. Use a Timer to Close a Form int counter = 0; private void timer1_Tick(object sender, EventArgs e) { if (counter > 50) { this.Close(); } }

  47. Using One Event Procedure to Handle Many Events private void buttonClick(object sender, EventArgs e) { if (sender.ToString().Contains("0")) { Phone = Phone + "0"; } else if (sender.ToString().Contains("1")) { Phone = Phone + "1"; } else { Phone = Phone + "2"; } textBox1.Text = Phone; }

More Related