I posted this on comp.lang, got several reactions (oClone which I never heard about, a seperate function) but all change the original listview. So in case someone missed this post and knows an alternative to copy a listview just like aClone works for arrays I post it here as well:
We show a listview in a window and use that LV variable to pass to a
method to export the contents to Excel.
Now 1 client wants to see a few of these columns omiitted in the Excel
export. It is not difficult ti remove the columns
(oLVl:DeleteColumn(2) etc) but thet should not be deleted in the
'master' listview showing in the screen.
Problem is that doing this:
oLVCopy:=oLVOriginal
and then delete the columns in oLVCopy also deletes these columns in
oLVOriginal, which is apparently copied by reference.
What would be the quickets way to copy the listview in such a way that
I can still pass it after deleting the required columns to my Excel
function without changing the original listview?
Dick
How to copy a Listview, changing things in the copy, keeping the original
- Phil Hepburn
- Posts: 743
- Joined: Sun Sep 11, 2016 2:16 pm
How to copy a Listview, changing things in the copy, keeping the original
LINQ is your friend.
Use LINQ code to operate on the original collection to make a resultant reduced (in columns) collection.
Get back to me with more specific information if you need help.
What collection have you got bound to your listview ?
Cheers,
Phil.
P.S. all of this stuff is in the free to download eNotes from the Forums documentation.
Use LINQ code to operate on the original collection to make a resultant reduced (in columns) collection.
Get back to me with more specific information if you need help.
What collection have you got bound to your listview ?
Cheers,
Phil.
P.S. all of this stuff is in the free to download eNotes from the Forums documentation.
How to copy a Listview, changing things in the copy, keeping the original
Sorry Phil,
It was a VO question. So Linq won't help. And collections are not VO either.
I can solve it in many ways, just copying the LV without it modifying the original would costs me by far the least time.
Dick
It was a VO question. So Linq won't help. And collections are not VO either.
I can solve it in many ways, just copying the LV without it modifying the original would costs me by far the least time.
Dick
How to copy a Listview, changing things in the copy, keeping the original
Hi Dick,
I think the quickest solution is what Franz posted in clcvo, just create an emtpy new one and copy the data you need only.
Although personally I would change the approach and not depend on a GUI item (ListView) for storing and passig the data, but use an intermediate array instead.
Chris
I think the quickest solution is what Franz posted in clcvo, just create an emtpy new one and copy the data you need only.
Although personally I would change the approach and not depend on a GUI item (ListView) for storing and passig the data, but use an intermediate array instead.
Chris
Chris Pyrgas
XSharp Development Team
chris(at)xsharp.eu
XSharp Development Team
chris(at)xsharp.eu
How to copy a Listview, changing things in the copy, keeping the original
Hello Chris,
Although personally I would change the approach and not depend on a GUI item (ListView) for storing and passing the data, but use an intermediate array instead.
You are of course right in there. I think I was so concentrated on adapting the current routine that I hardly realized it's not the best way to solve it :unsure:
One of my employees who wrote this LV->Excel years ago told me today she also wrote a function to remove columns from the multi-dimensional array we create from this LV and always use to export to Excel.
This worked nearly the same, just a bit further up in the program, and is more elegant.
Thanks for your comments!
Dick
Although personally I would change the approach and not depend on a GUI item (ListView) for storing and passing the data, but use an intermediate array instead.
You are of course right in there. I think I was so concentrated on adapting the current routine that I hardly realized it's not the best way to solve it :unsure:
One of my employees who wrote this LV->Excel years ago told me today she also wrote a function to remove columns from the multi-dimensional array we create from this LV and always use to export to Excel.
This worked nearly the same, just a bit further up in the program, and is more elegant.
Thanks for your comments!
Dick
How to copy a Listview, changing things in the copy, keeping the original
You're welcome, glad you've already got a nice solution!
Chris
Chris
Chris Pyrgas
XSharp Development Team
chris(at)xsharp.eu
XSharp Development Team
chris(at)xsharp.eu