I have a ListView where I wish to tweak the drawing of items (for example highlighting certain strings in list view itmes), however I don\'t want to radically alter the way
ComponentOwl recently released a freeware component called Better ListView Express.
It looks and behaves exactly like the ListView, but has much more powerful owner drawing capabilities - you can draw accurately over all elements and even turn off some drawing (e.g. selection to make you on).
I don't know if this will completely help you, but I'll add a few notes:
One thing to keep in mind is that DrawSubItem
will draw the first item, too, and that's probably where you are getting the double-rendered
look from.
Some things to try (not factored for speed):
private void listView1_DrawItem(object sender, DrawListViewItemEventArgs e) {
e.DrawBackground();
if ((e.State & ListViewItemStates.Selected) == ListViewItemStates.Selected) {
Rectangle r = new Rectangle(e.Bounds.Left + 4, e.Bounds.Top, TextRenderer.MeasureText(e.Item.Text, e.Item.Font).Width, e.Bounds.Height);
e.Graphics.FillRectangle(SystemBrushes.Highlight, r);
e.Item.ForeColor = SystemColors.HighlightText;
} else {
e.Item.ForeColor = SystemColors.WindowText;
}
e.DrawText();
e.DrawFocusRectangle();
}
For your DrawSubItem routine, make sure you aren't drawing in the first column and I added the DrawBackground()
routine. I added some clipping to the highlight rectangle so it wouldn't paint outside the column parameters.
private void listView1_DrawSubItem(object sender, DrawListViewSubItemEventArgs e) {
if (e.ColumnIndex > 0) {
e.DrawBackground();
string searchTerm = "Term";
int index = e.SubItem.Text.IndexOf(searchTerm);
if (index >= 0) {
string sBefore = e.SubItem.Text.Substring(0, index);
Size bounds = new Size(e.Bounds.Width, e.Bounds.Height);
Size s1 = TextRenderer.MeasureText(e.Graphics, sBefore, this.Font, bounds);
Size s2 = TextRenderer.MeasureText(e.Graphics, searchTerm, this.Font, bounds);
Rectangle rect = new Rectangle(e.Bounds.X + s1.Width, e.Bounds.Y, s2.Width, e.Bounds.Height);
e.Graphics.SetClip(e.Bounds);
e.Graphics.FillRectangle(new SolidBrush(Color.Yellow), rect);
e.Graphics.ResetClip();
}
e.DrawText();
}
}
In general, owner drawing a ListView control is welcoming in a world of hurt. You aren't drawing in Visual Styles anymore, you would have to do that yourself, too. Ugh.
private void listView1_DrawItem(object sender, DrawListViewItemEventArgs e)
{
e.DrawBackground();
if (e.Item.Selected)
{
e.Graphics.FillRectangle(new SolidBrush(Color.FromArgb(250, 194, 87)), e.Bounds);
}
e.Graphics.DrawString(e.Item.Text, new Font("Arial", 10), new SolidBrush(Color.Black), e.Bounds);
}
I haven't got the time now to write up a complete answer so instead I'll put down some quick notes and come back to it later.
As LarsTech said, owner drawing a ListView
control is a pain - the .Net ListView
class is a wrapper around the underlying Win32 List View Control and the ability to "Owner draw" is provided by the NM_CUSTOMDRAW notification code. As such there is no "default .Net implementation" - the default is to use the underlying Win32 control.
To make life even more difficult there are a number of extra considerations to make:
DrawItem
and DrawSubItem
you may well be drawing the contents of the first cell twice.DrawItem
event will occur without corresponding DrawSubItem
events, meaning that if you draw a background in the DrawItem
event and then draw the text in the DrawSubItem
event your item text will disappear when you mouse over.DrawItem
event occurs first, anything you draw in the DrawItem
handler (e.g. the selection effect) may well be overlayed by things you do in the DrawSubItem
handler (e.g. having certain cells with a different background color).All in all handling owner drawing is a fairly involved affair - I found it best to handle all drawing inside the DrawSubItem
event, its also best to perform your own double-buffering by using the BufferedGraphics class.
I also found looking at the source code for ObjectListView very handy.
Finally, all of this is just to handle the details mode of the list view (the only mode I am using), if you want the other modes to work too then I believe that there are extra things to take account of.
When I get a chance I'll try and post my working example code.
Item selected back color changed. In by default blue in windows. This code will help for u in any colors:
private void listView1_DrawItem(object sender, DrawListViewItemEventArgs e)
{
e.DrawBackground();
if (e.Item.Selected)
{
e.Graphics.FillRectangle(new SolidBrush(Color.FromArgb(250, 194, 87)), e.Bounds);
}
e.Graphics.DrawString(e.Item.Text, new Font("Arial", 10), new SolidBrush(Color.Black), e.Bounds);
}
private void Form1_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
for (int ix = 0; ix < listView1.Items.Count; ++ix)
{
var item = listView1.Items[ix];
item.BackColor = (ix % 2 == 0) ? Color.Gray : Color.LightGray;
}
}
private void listView1_DrawColumnHeader(object sender, DrawListViewColumnHeaderEventArgs e)
{
e.DrawDefault = true;
}
}
}