Monday, 26 January 2015

Creating Your First C# Windows Application

Introduction

C# appears to be the new language of choice around the development community language. Microsoft has introduced a language that will  bring together both Visual Basic developers and Visual C++ developers alike. It is important to remember that, this application is only to show you some of the most basic components in C#. Here we will design a form that will allow a user to populate a listbox with customer names they type above.
 This article covers essentially the same methods only converted to run in .NET and written in C#. This code is unfortunately based on Visual Studio .NET.

Creating A New Project

To create a new project you need to first load Visual Studio .NET and Choose the Visual C# Projects, “Windows Application” as in image 1. Type the name of the project below along with selecting the desired location to store your files in computer.
















You will need to add the following controls onto your form.
ItemQuantity
GroupBox1
Label3
ComboBox1
Textbox2
Button3
ListBox1
Arrange your items onto the form so that they look something like this. I would suggest that you place the GroupBox on the form first, otherwise you will need to re-drag all item inside the box once they are on the form. Arrange the items as you see below in image2.





Labels, Labels, Labels…..
You will want to add the value ‘Title’ to the Text property of label1. The Text property for label2 should be set to ‘First Name’ and the Text property of label3 should be…….’Last Name’, big surprise huh? Text properties of button1 should be ‘OK’, button2 should be ‘Clear List’ and button3 will be ‘Close’. I have set the Text Property of groupBox1 to ‘Customers’ and Form1 to ‘Customers’ as well. You may also wish to set the Text value of the listBox and comboBox to blank also.




Adding The Code

To begin, when this form loads we need to populate the ComboBox with the appropriate values. Add the following code by clicking on the form on the outside of the groupBox. You should see something like this:
private void Form1_Load(object sender, System.EventArgs e)
{
//Add the following code
//to fill the comboBox when
//form loads.

comboBox1.Items.Add("Dr.");
comboBox1.Items.Add("Mr.");
comboBox1.Items.Add("Mrs.");
comboBox1.Items.Add("Ms.");
comboBox1.Focus();
}
We now need to handle what happens when the user hits the OK button after populating the text boxes. To do this simply click on the Form1.cs[Design]* tab at the top left to switch from code-view to the form object designer. Double-click on the OK button and add the following code:
private void button1_Click(object sender, System.EventArgs e)
{
listBox1.Items.Add(comboBox1.Text + " " +
textBox1.Text + " " + textBox2.Text);
textBox1.Text = "";
textBox2.Text = "";
comboBox1.Text = "";
comboBox1.Focus();
}
When we want to allow the user to clear all fields entered into the listBox, we will need to go back like we did above to the visual designer and double-click on the Clear List button, this should again switch to a code view and allow you to add the following code:
private void button2_Click(object sender, System.EventArgs e)
{
listBox1.Items.Clear();
comboBox1.Focus();
}
And finally we want to allow the user to be able to close the application when they want. To show you another way to allow the user to close the program aside from that catchy X in the upper right-hand corner, I have provided a button entitled……Close. I know, you were looking for some complex name, weren’t you? Anyway, before I get off on a tangent, double-click the Close button and add the following code below:
private void button3_Click(object sender, System.EventArgs e)
{
this.Dispose();
}


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