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How would I implement this?

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  • N Nick Parker

    Frank Olorin Rizzi wrote: if(t.Text == String.Empty) break; Woops, I guess I flip-flopped that. :-O Ah well, I think he got the main idea which was important. Frank Olorin Rizzi wrote: Also, why not keep your own collection of controls containing only the text boxes so that you would not have to parse through all of the controls in the form? Because then he would have to maintain that collection where as the Form already maintains a collection of all controls applied to it. This is more extensible and easier to maintain. Granted there are other ways to do this, they simple require more work and don't provide much more in the efficiency department. :) -Nick Parker

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    Roland Bar
    wrote on last edited by
    #5

    Nick Parker wrote: Because then he would have to maintain that collection where as the Form already maintains a collection of all controls applied to it. This is more extensible and easier to maintain. Granted there are other ways to do this, they simple require more work and don't provide much more in the efficiency department. This argument lacks, if there are more text boxes in th esame form... Roland Bär

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    • N Nick Parker

      Frank Olorin Rizzi wrote: if(t.Text == String.Empty) break; Woops, I guess I flip-flopped that. :-O Ah well, I think he got the main idea which was important. Frank Olorin Rizzi wrote: Also, why not keep your own collection of controls containing only the text boxes so that you would not have to parse through all of the controls in the form? Because then he would have to maintain that collection where as the Form already maintains a collection of all controls applied to it. This is more extensible and easier to maintain. Granted there are other ways to do this, they simple require more work and don't provide much more in the efficiency department. :) -Nick Parker

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      Frank Olorin Rizzi
      wrote on last edited by
      #6

      Nick Parker wrote: Because then he would have to maintain that collection where as the Form already maintains a collection of all controls applied to it hmm.. yes, I see what you mean. ...speaking of which, let me ask this: If I picked the TextBox object that gets added to the Form's Controls collection (say it is named tBox1), and simply add it to my own collection (say an Hashtable) like so: myTable.Add(myTable.Count, tBox1); Wouldn't I be adding just a reference? Thus the impact on the memory would be relatively small? Or am I missing something here?

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      • R Roland Bar

        Nick Parker wrote: Because then he would have to maintain that collection where as the Form already maintains a collection of all controls applied to it. This is more extensible and easier to maintain. Granted there are other ways to do this, they simple require more work and don't provide much more in the efficiency department. This argument lacks, if there are more text boxes in th esame form... Roland Bär

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        Nick Parker
        wrote on last edited by
        #7

        Roland Bär wrote: This argument lacks, if there are more text boxes in th esame form... Show me an example please. -Nick Parker

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        • N Nick Parker

          daljv wrote: So I want to use a switch statement. The problem is, how? Why not just do soomething like this:

          ControlCollection col = (ControlCollection)this.Controls;
          foreach(Control t in col)
          {
          if(t is TextBox)
          {
          if(t.Text != String.Empty)
          {
          // Do something here.
          break;
          }
          }
          }

          -Nick Parker

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          Philip Fitzsimons
          wrote on last edited by
          #8

          this won't work - t is TextBox, t would still be a Control which does not have a .Text field so use "as". also why are you casting this.Controls? its a ControlCollection already... foreach(Control t in this.Controls) {  TextBox tb = t as TextBox;  if(tb != null && tb.Text == String.Empty)  {   // Do something here   break;  } }


          "When the only tool you have is a hammer, a sore thumb you will have."

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          • P Philip Fitzsimons

            this won't work - t is TextBox, t would still be a Control which does not have a .Text field so use "as". also why are you casting this.Controls? its a ControlCollection already... foreach(Control t in this.Controls) {  TextBox tb = t as TextBox;  if(tb != null && tb.Text == String.Empty)  {   // Do something here   break;  } }


            "When the only tool you have is a hammer, a sore thumb you will have."

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            Nick Parker
            wrote on last edited by
            #9

            Philip Fitzsimons wrote: this won't work Yes, it will, try it. Philip Fitzsimons wrote: also why are you casting this.Controls? its a ControlCollection already... Test your code, it will fail if you don't cast it, mine did, I previously wasn't casting it. :) -Nick Parker

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            • N Nick Parker

              Roland Bär wrote: This argument lacks, if there are more text boxes in th esame form... Show me an example please. -Nick Parker

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              Roland Bar
              wrote on last edited by
              #10

              Sorry, not precice enough ... :-O if you have the 20 textboxes, that should be tested, and then also other textboxes in the same form, that should not be checked, it is better to have the 20 textboxes in an own collection. Like this you can iterate over your collection without checking if it is a textbox to be checked or not. Hope it is clear what I mean. :~ greets Roland

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              • N Nick Parker

                Philip Fitzsimons wrote: this won't work Yes, it will, try it. Philip Fitzsimons wrote: also why are you casting this.Controls? its a ControlCollection already... Test your code, it will fail if you don't cast it, mine did, I previously wasn't casting it. :) -Nick Parker

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                Philip Fitzsimons
                wrote on last edited by
                #11

                I can't see who it would work - it won't work on my computer... "t" is a Control. "t.Text" is not valid on a Control. how does it compile?


                "When the only tool you have is a hammer, a sore thumb you will have."

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                • R Roland Bar

                  Sorry, not precice enough ... :-O if you have the 20 textboxes, that should be tested, and then also other textboxes in the same form, that should not be checked, it is better to have the 20 textboxes in an own collection. Like this you can iterate over your collection without checking if it is a textbox to be checked or not. Hope it is clear what I mean. :~ greets Roland

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                  Nick Parker
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #12

                  Roland Bär wrote: if you have the 20 textboxes, that should be tested, and then also other textboxes in the same form, that should not be checked, it is better to have the 20 textboxes in an own collection. Like this you can iterate over your collection without checking if it is a textbox to be checked or not. There are other ways around your problem, however my answer still identifies how to accomplish what he was asking for. -Nick Parker

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                  • P Philip Fitzsimons

                    I can't see who it would work - it won't work on my computer... "t" is a Control. "t.Text" is not valid on a Control. how does it compile?


                    "When the only tool you have is a hammer, a sore thumb you will have."

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                    Nick Parker
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #13

                    Philip Fitzsimons wrote: how does it compile? Drop my code onto a form, it works. :-D -Nick Parker

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                    • F Frank Olorin Rizzi

                      Nick Parker wrote: Because then he would have to maintain that collection where as the Form already maintains a collection of all controls applied to it hmm.. yes, I see what you mean. ...speaking of which, let me ask this: If I picked the TextBox object that gets added to the Form's Controls collection (say it is named tBox1), and simply add it to my own collection (say an Hashtable) like so: myTable.Add(myTable.Count, tBox1); Wouldn't I be adding just a reference? Thus the impact on the memory would be relatively small? Or am I missing something here?

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                      Nick Parker
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #14

                      There are many ways in which you can tackle this, depending on the exact circumstances you should consider using a specific method. My method is rather abstract. :) -Nick Parker

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                      • N Nick Parker

                        Philip Fitzsimons wrote: how does it compile? Drop my code onto a form, it works. :-D -Nick Parker

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                        Philip Fitzsimons
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #15

                        no it does not: error CS0117: 'System.Web.UI.Control' does not contain a definition for 'Text'


                        "When the only tool you have is a hammer, a sore thumb you will have."

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                        • P Philip Fitzsimons

                          no it does not: error CS0117: 'System.Web.UI.Control' does not contain a definition for 'Text'


                          "When the only tool you have is a hammer, a sore thumb you will have."

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                          Nick Parker
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #16

                          Philip Fitzsimons wrote: no it does not: Ah, I see you are doing this on an ASP.NET webform. This works on a Windows Form. ;) -Nick Parker

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                          • N Nick Parker

                            Philip Fitzsimons wrote: no it does not: Ah, I see you are doing this on an ASP.NET webform. This works on a Windows Form. ;) -Nick Parker

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                            Philip Fitzsimons
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #17

                            :-D


                            "When the only tool you have is a hammer, a sore thumb you will have."

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