
Introduction
This article is a tutorial on how to create a WinForms selectable datagridview with a separate Form for editing detail row data using a strongly typed DataSet data layer. We will use Visual Studio 2005 and .NET 2.0.
Background
Creating an editable datagrid is a very straightforward way to edit a datagrid's values, but sometimes a separate editable Form/UserControl is desired (increased flexibility, more detail, etc.). This example will load the editable fields and lookups with the grid on Form load. This will keep us from having to synchronize and manage separate instances of similar data and will reduce round trips to the database. When dealing with lots of records, you would want to implement a where filter in your query. We will include a Save button on the Edit form. The Save button could just as easily be implemented on the main form. The edit form could also be changed to a UserControl to display on the main form instead of a popup.
Walkthrough
1. Add a DataSource (Strongly typed dataset)
2. Create the DataGridView
3. Create the Edit Form
- Open the
Order form in design view.
- Change the
NorthwindDataSet.Orders table in the DataSources Window from DataGridView to Details.

- Drag the detail table from the
DataSources Window onto the Order form. This will create the 3 controls on the form as well as the DataSet, BindingSource, TableAdapter, and BindingNavigator.
- Delete the
BindingNavigator.
- Drop a
Button control on the form and rename it ButtonSave.
- Click each
ComboBoxes' "Smart Tag" to edit the DataSource, DisplayMember, SelectedValue, and ValueMember properties as we did earlier with the GridViewComboBoxColumns.
You must check the Use data bound items option to edit these values.


- This will create
BindingSource and TableAdapter components on the form for the Employees and Customers tables.
- Delete the corresponding
TableAdapters (Not the OrdersTableAdapter) since we will be filling these tables from the Orders form.
- Set the
DataBindings.Text property to None since we're now binding to the SelectedValue property.

4. Instantiate the Edit Form
- Create a Sub
New() in the Edit Form.

- Double-click the
Save button in design mode to create a click event handler.
- Use the following code (fix any naming differences):
Private Sub Orders_FormClosing(ByVal sender As Object, _
ByVal e As System.Windows.Forms.FormClosingEventArgs) _
Handles Me.FormClosing
Me.NorthwindDataSet.Orders(Me.OrdersBindingSource.Position)._
RejectChanges()
End Sub
Private Sub ButtonSave_Click(ByVal sender As System.Object, _
ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles ButtonSave.Click
Me.Validate()
Me.OrdersBindingSource.EndEdit()
If Not Me.OrdersTableAdapter.Update(Me.NorthwindDataset.Orders) > 0 _
Then
MsgBox("No records were updated.")
End If
Me.Close()
End Sub
Public Sub New(ByVal nwDataSet As NorthwindDataSet, _
ByVal position As Integer)
InitializeComponent()
Me.NorthwindDataset = nwDataSet
Me.OrdersBindingSource.DataSource = Me.NorthwindDataSet
Me.CustomersBindingSource.DataSource = Me.NorthwindDataSet
Me.EmployeesBindingSource.DataSource = Me.NorthwindDataSet
Me.OrdersBindingSource.Position = position
End Sub
Private Sub Order_Load(ByVal sender As System.Object, _
ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles MyBase.Load
End Sub
Note
In Sub New, we will pass in the dataset created and filled with the grid. We then point the local NorthwindDataSet variable to the existing dataset. This does not change the properties already set in InitializeComponent for the DataSet, so we must reconfigure the other elements on the form to point to the existing DataSet. Fortunately, the BindingSources provide abstraction. We need only reset the 3 BindingSources' DataSource properties. We then set the BindingSource position so the form knows which record to edit.
- On Save click, we will save the changes and exit.
- Finally on form close, we undo any changes that were not saved, because the
dataset is shared with the grid.
5. Code the DataGridView Double-click event
- Open the
Orders form in code view.
- Create a
RowHeaderMouseDoubleClick event handler.

- Create a
FormClosing event handler.
- Use the following code (fix any naming differences):
Private Sub Orders_FormClosing(ByVal sender As Object, _
ByVal e As System.Windows.Forms.FormClosingEventArgs) _
Handles Me.FormClosing
Me.OrdersDataGridView.Dispose()
End Sub
Private Sub Orders_Load(ByVal sender As System.Object, _
ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles MyBase.Load
Me.EmployeesTableAdapter.Fill(Me.NorthwindDataSet.Employees)
Me.CustomersTableAdapter.Fill(Me.NorthwindDataSet.Customers)
Me.OrdersTableAdapter.Fill(Me.NorthwindDataSet.Orders)
End Sub
Private Sub OrdersDataGridView_RowHeaderMouseDoubleClick_
(ByVal sender As Object, ByVal e _
As System.Windows.Forms.DataGridViewCellMouseEventArgs) _
Handles OrdersDataGridView.RowHeaderMouseDoubleClick
If Me.OrdersDataGridView.SelectedRows.Count > 0 Then
Dim editForm As New Order(Me.NorthwindDataSet, _
Me.NorthwindDataSet.Orders.Rows.IndexOf_
(CType(CType(Me.OrdersDataGridView.SelectedRows(0)._
DataBoundItem, DataRowView).Row, NorthwindDataSet.OrdersRow)))
editForm.Show()
End If
End Sub
Note
The DataSet is filled on form load. The tableadapter fill statements were created by configuring the BindingSource. We have to dispose of the grid before the form closes to avoid possible DataErrors from the GridViewComboBoxColumns.
The Double-click event instantiates the detail edit form, passing in the DataSet and the position. The position is found by tracking the selected row back to its row instance in the order table, then finding the index of that row in the dataset.