Click here to Skip to main content
Licence 
First Posted 26 Mar 2003
Views 133,118
Bookmarked 70 times

Complex Data Binding a collection implementing IBindingList and ITypedList

By | 31 Mar 2003 | Article
Complex Data Binding a collection implementing IBindingList and ITypedList

Sample Image - ComplexDataBinding.jpg

Introduction

Data binding can be nasty - especially when you cant use the System.Data objects. I have tried to use all the features of data binding to show them to you. It is pretty small, but takes a hell of a long way to get there.

The sample shows a custom collection with objects in it having properties, some of those properties are collections again, with objects in them - i.e. hierarchical data. Maybe some of the properties can't be edited directly because the grid is not smart enough - like SqlTypes.

The Problem

We have a collection of objects that need to go into a Windows DataGrid. They may or may not have properties that are collections too.

The Solution

We need to create the following objects:

  • A class implementing ITypedList and IBindingList (your collection)
  • A class that is your data (lots of properties and stuff)
  • A class implementing IComparer (for sorting)
  • A class implementing PropertyDescriptor (for using non grid compatible types, like SqlTypes)
  • A class implementing Attribute (so we know what's in the collection)

For those of you that have tried this and it didn't work, a couple of issues came up that I will discuss.

ITypedList.GetItemProperties(PropertyDescriptor[] listAccessors) 

This was the nastiest method interface in the project. The problem had to do with the listAccessors. If the parameter is not null, then the only one that should be processed is the last one. I had to decompile System.Data.DataView.ITypedList.GetItemProperties to find that out. Then I needed to detect our custom collections and return the properties for the underlying data.

SqlPropertyDescriptor : PropertyDescriptor

This one, although straight forward to implement, is a bit tricky in that when calling GetItemProperties and we want to use this PropertyDesciptor instead of the default, we need to replace it in the collection. I wrote this method to do it:

protected PropertyDescriptorCollection 
    GetPropertyDescriptorCollection( ArrayList properties )
{
    if ( properties == null || properties.Count == 0 )
        return new PropertyDescriptorCollection(null);

    ArrayList output = new ArrayList();

    foreach ( PropertyDescriptor p in properties )
    {
        if ( p.Attributes.Matches(new Attribute[]
            {new BindableAttribute(false)}) ) continue;

        if ( p.PropertyType.Namespace == "System.Data.SqlTypes" )
        {
            // create the base type property descriptor
            output.Add(SqlPropertyDescriptor.
                GetProperty( p.Name, p.PropertyType ) );
        }
        else
        {
            output.Add(p);
        }
    }
    return new PropertyDescriptorCollection((PropertyDescriptor[])
        output.ToArray(typeof(PropertyDescriptor)));
}

After that, it was all straight forward.

The SetValue and GetValue of the PropertyDescriptor provide the means to edit SqlTypes like SqlDateTime. After detecting the namespace of the data type, I use SqlPropertDescriptor which implements GetValue() and SetValue(). These methods try to figure everything out for themselves:

public override void SetValue(object component,object value)
{
    try
    {
        PropertyInfo pi = component.GetType().GetProperty(this.Name);
        Object o;
        if ( value == DBNull.Value )
        {
            o = component.GetType().GetField("Null", 
                BindingFlags.Static | BindingFlags.Public | 
                BindingFlags.GetField).GetValue(component);
                
        }
        else
        {
            o = pi.PropertyType.GetConstructor(new Type[]
                {BaseType}).Invoke(new Object[]{value});
        }
        pi.SetValue(component,o, null);
    }
    catch(Exception ex)
    {
        Debug.WriteLine(ex);
    }
}

public override object GetValue(object component)
{
    try
    {
        object Property = component.GetType().GetProperty
            (this.Name).GetValue(component,null);

        // handle nulls
        if ( (bool)Property.GetType().GetProperty
            ("IsNull").GetValue(Property,null) ) 
            return DBNull.Value;

        object Value = Property.GetType().GetProperty
            ("Value").GetValue(Property,null);
        return Value;
    }
    catch(Exception ex)
    {
        Debug.WriteLine(ex);
    }
    return null;
}

License

This article has no explicit license attached to it but may contain usage terms in the article text or the download files themselves. If in doubt please contact the author via the discussion board below.

A list of licenses authors might use can be found here

About the Author

Dan Glass

Architect
support.com
Australia Australia

Member

Tech Support

Sign Up to vote   Poor Excellent
Add a reason or comment to your vote: x
Votes of 3 or less require a comment

Comments and Discussions

 
You must Sign In to use this message board. (secure sign-in)
 
Search this forum  
 FAQ
    Noise  Layout  Per page   
  Refresh
GeneralAdditional code needed for previous message. Pinmembergffajardo5:38 14 Oct '06  
QuestionRe: Additional code needed for previous message. Pinmemberkavano8:33 25 Oct '06  
Question.Net 2.0 makes this unnecessary Pinmembergffajardo12:15 13 Oct '06  
GeneralExplaination of The Tricky ITypedList.GetItemProperties PinmemberWeifen Luo18:00 8 May '06  
GeneralUsage Patterns PinmemberSteve Hawkes20:23 19 Mar '06  
QuestionXML data binding? Pinmemberhellamasta0:18 14 Nov '05  
QuestionHow: addnew row in datagrid? Pinmemberartem1235:45 21 May '05  
how to make addnew row visible in datagrid?
IBindingList.allownew return true
why it's not visible?
AnswerRe: How: addnew row in datagrid? PinmemberJim37373737316:59 21 Jun '06  
QuestionRe: How: addnew row in datagrid? Pinmemberyfessler22:32 22 Jun '06  
AnswerRe: How: addnew row in datagrid? PinmemberJim3737373736:21 23 Jun '06  
Generalhiding properties/strong typing/inheriting PinmemberRob STS19:06 15 Nov '04  
GeneralRe: hiding properties/strong typing/inheriting Pinmemberlemonia2:49 22 Nov '04  
GeneralRe: hiding properties/strong typing/inheriting PinmemberRob STS13:58 10 Dec '04  
GeneralRe: hiding properties/strong typing/inheriting PinsussAnonymous4:03 14 Dec '04  
GeneralVery nice work, still a question on IBindingList.Find() Pinmembernorthernlights23:20 8 Dec '03  
QuestionDo you know.....? Pinmemberggaruda16:45 13 Sep '03  
AnswerRe: Do you know.....? PinmemberDan Glass7:21 15 Sep '03  
Generalgreat work ! Pinmemberdirkus12:54 7 Sep '03  
GeneralRe: great work ! PinmemberCrispin Horsfield9:35 27 Feb '04  
GeneralThank you! Pinmembersharkfish11:05 18 Aug '03  
GeneralThanks Pinmemberpthomson15:25 4 Aug '03  
QuestionModify to support use by the Databinding picker? PinsussBill Foust5:46 23 Jun '03  
GeneralSupportsChangeNotification Pinsussanonim21:04 2 Apr '03  
GeneralGreat! Pinmembersonemaf8:18 1 Apr '03  
GeneralRe: Great! Pinmembermordejai9:31 1 Apr '03  

General General    News News    Suggestion Suggestion    Question Question    Bug Bug    Answer Answer    Joke Joke    Rant Rant    Admin Admin   

Use Ctrl+Left/Right to switch messages, Ctrl+Up/Down to switch threads, Ctrl+Shift+Left/Right to switch pages.

Permalink | Advertise | Privacy | Mobile
Web03 | 2.5.120528.1 | Last Updated 1 Apr 2003
Article Copyright 2003 by Dan Glass
Everything else Copyright © CodeProject, 1999-2012
Terms of Use
Layout: fixed | fluid