I'm trying to populate a listbox with a series checkbox entries, however once running the code below the listbox has blank entries in it, which are selectable, i.e. a blue bar appears. Howev开发者_JAVA技巧er neither the text or checkbox appears.
for (int num = 1; num <= 10; num++)
{
CheckBox checkBox = new CheckBox();
checkBox.Text = "sheet" + num.ToString();
checkBox.Name = "checkbox" + num.ToString();
thelistbox.Items.Add(checkBox);
}
The best way to handle this is to create a list of data -- in your case, a list of numbers (or a list of strings (sheet1, sheet2, etc). You can then assign that list of numbers to thelistbox.ItemsSource. Inside the XAML of your listbox, set the ItemTemplate to include a CheckBox and bind the number to the text of the checkbox.
Try changing
checkBox.Text = "sheet" + num.ToString();
to
checkBox.Content = "sheet" + num.ToString();
With that change, I was able to use your example successfully.
To follow up on Brian's comment, here is an outline of a simple checkbox list in C# wpf. This will need more code to handle checking/unchecking boxes and general post-interaction handlers. This setup presents the difference in elements on two lists of objects (defined elsewhere) in a checkbox list.
The XAML
...
<ListBox Name="MissingNamesList" ItemsSource="{Binding TheMissingChildren}">
<ListBox.ItemTemplate>
<DataTemplate>
<StackPanel>
<CheckBox Content="{Binding Path=Name}" />
</StackPanel>
</DataTemplate>
</ListBox.ItemTemplate>
</ListBox>
...
The supporting C# code:
...
public partial class MissingNamesWindow : Window
{
// Make this accessible from just about anywhere
public ObservableCollection<ChildName> TheMissingChildren { get; set; }
public MissingNamesWindow()
{
// Build our collection so we can bind to it later
FindMissingChildren();
InitializeComponent();
// Set our datacontext for this window to stuff that lives here
DataContext = this;
}
private void FindMissingChildren()
{
// Initialize our observable collection
TheMissingChildren = new ObservableCollection<ChildName>();
// Build our list of objects on list A but not B
List<ChildName> names = new List<ChildName>(MainWindow.ChildNamesFromDB.Except(
MainWindow.ChildNamesFromDisk).ToList());
// Build observable collection from out unique list of objects
foreach (var name in names)
{
TheMissingChildren.Add(name);
}
}
}
...
Hope that clarifies a bit.
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