Occurs when the control loses focus.
Assembly: System.Windows.Forms (in System.Windows.Forms.dll)
<BrowsableAttribute(False)> _
Public Event LostFocus As EventHandler[BrowsableAttribute(false)]
public event EventHandler LostFocus[BrowsableAttribute(false)]
public:
event EventHandler^ LostFocus {
void add (EventHandler^ value);
void remove (EventHandler^ value);
}[<BrowsableAttribute(false)>]
member LostFocus : IEvent<EventHandler,
EventArgs>
When you change the focus by using the keyboard (TAB, SHIFT+TAB, and so on), by calling the Select or SelectNextControl methods, or by setting the ContainerControl
When you change the focus by using the mouse or by calling the Focus method, focus events occur in the following order:
If the CausesValidation property is set to false, the Validating and Validated events are suppressed.
If the Cancel property of the CancelEventArgs is set to true in the Validating event delegate, all events that would usually occur after the Validating event are suppressed.
Note |
|---|
The GotFocus and LostFocus events are low-level focus events that are tied to the WM_KILLFOCUS and WM_SETFOCUS Windows messages. Typically, the GotFocus and LostFocus events are only used when updating UICues or when writing custom controls. Instead the Enter and Leave events should be used for all controls except the Form class, which uses the Activated and Deactivate events. For more information about the GotFocus and LostFocus events, see the WM_SETFOCUS and WM_KILLFOCUS topics in the "Keyboard Input Reference" section in the MSDN library at http://msdn.microsoft.com/library. |
Caution |
|---|
Do not attempt to set focus from within the Enter, GotFocus, Leave, LostFocus, Validating, or Validated event handlers. Doing so can cause your application or the operating system to stop responding. For more information, see the WM_KILLFOCUS topic in the "Keyboard Input Reference" section, and the "Message Deadlocks" section of the "About Messages and Message Queues" topic in the MSDN library at http://msdn.microsoft.com/library. |
For more information about handling events, see Consuming Events.
The following code example demonstrates validating the text for TextBox1. It also demonstrates handling the LostFocus event by setting the FileDialog
Private Sub TextBox1_Validating(ByVal sender As Object, _
ByVal e As System.ComponentModel.CancelEventArgs) _
Handles TextBox1.Validating
' If nothing is entered,
' an ArgumentException is caught; if an invalid directory is entered,
' a DirectoryNotFoundException is caught. An appropriate error message
' is displayed in either case.
Try
Dim directory As New System.IO.DirectoryInfo(TextBox1.Text)
directory.GetFiles()
ErrorProvider1.SetError(TextBox1, "")
Catch ex1 As System.ArgumentException
ErrorProvider1.SetError(TextBox1, "Please enter a directory")
Catch ex2 As System.IO.DirectoryNotFoundException
ErrorProvider1.SetError(TextBox1, _
"The directory does not exist." & _
"Try again with a different directory.")
End Try
End Sub
' This method handles the LostFocus event for TextBox1 by setting the
' dialog's InitialDirectory property to the text in TextBox1.
Private Sub TextBox1_LostFocus(ByVal sender As Object, _
ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles TextBox1.LostFocus
OpenFileDialog1.InitialDirectory = TextBox1.Text
End Sub
' This method demonstrates using the ErrorProvider.GetError method
' to check for an error before opening the dialog box.
Private Sub Button1_Click(ByVal sender As System.Object, _
ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles Button1.Click
'If there is no error, then open the dialog box.
If ErrorProvider1.GetError(TextBox1) = "" Then
Dim dialogResult As DialogResult = OpenFileDialog1.ShowDialog()
End If
End Sub
private void textBox1_Validating(object sender,
System.ComponentModel.CancelEventArgs e)
{
// If nothing is entered,
// an ArgumentException is caught; if an invalid directory is entered,
// a DirectoryNotFoundException is caught. An appropriate error message
// is displayed in either case.
try
{
System.IO.DirectoryInfo directory =
new System.IO.DirectoryInfo(textBox1.Text);
directory.GetFiles();
errorProvider1.SetError(textBox1, "");
}
catch(System.ArgumentException ex1)
{
errorProvider1.SetError(textBox1, "Please enter a directory");
}
catch(System.IO.DirectoryNotFoundException ex2)
{
errorProvider1.SetError(textBox1, "The directory does not exist." +
"Try again with a different directory.");
}
}
// This method handles the LostFocus event for textBox1 by setting the
// dialog's InitialDirectory property to the text in textBox1.
private void textBox1_LostFocus(object sender, System.EventArgs e)
{
openFileDialog1.InitialDirectory = textBox1.Text;
}
// This method demonstrates using the ErrorProvider.GetError method
// to check for an error before opening the dialog box.
private void button1_Click(System.Object sender, System.EventArgs e)
{
//If there is no error, then open the dialog box.
if (errorProvider1.GetError(textBox1)=="")
{
DialogResult dialogResult = openFileDialog1.ShowDialog();
}
}
private:
void TextBox1_Validating( Object^ sender,
System::ComponentModel::CancelEventArgs^ e )
{
// If nothing is entered,
// an ArgumentException is caught; if an invalid directory is entered,
// a DirectoryNotFoundException is caught. An appropriate error message
// is displayed in either case.
try
{
System::IO::DirectoryInfo^ directory = gcnew System::IO::DirectoryInfo( TextBox1->Text );
directory->GetFiles();
ErrorProvider1->SetError( TextBox1, "" );
}
catch ( System::ArgumentException^ )
{
ErrorProvider1->SetError( TextBox1, "Please enter a directory" );
}
catch ( System::IO::DirectoryNotFoundException^ )
{
ErrorProvider1->SetError( TextBox1, "The directory does not exist."
"Try again with a different directory." );
}
}
// This method handles the LostFocus event for TextBox1 by setting the
// dialog's InitialDirectory property to the text in TextBox1.
void TextBox1_LostFocus( Object^ sender, System::EventArgs^ e )
{
OpenFileDialog1->InitialDirectory = TextBox1->Text;
}
// This method demonstrates using the ErrorProvider.GetError method
// to check for an error before opening the dialog box.
void Button1_Click( System::Object^ sender, System::EventArgs^ e )
{
//If there is no error, then open the dialog box.
if ( ErrorProvider1->GetError( TextBox1 )->Equals( "" ) )
{
::DialogResult dialogResult = OpenFileDialog1->ShowDialog();
}
}
The following code example demonstrates validating the TextBox1 object's text.
It also demonstrates handling the text box’s LostFocus event by setting the file dialog's InitialDirectory
property to the text in TextBox1. The code example used the ErrorProvider.GetError method to check for an error before opening the file dialog.
To run this example paste the following code into a form containing a TextBox named TextBox1, an OpenFileDialog named OpenFileDialog1, a button named Button1, and an ErrorProvider named ErrorProvider1.
Windows 7, Windows Vista SP1 or later, Windows XP SP3, Windows XP SP2 x64 Edition, Windows Server 2008 (Server Core not supported), Windows Server 2008 R2 (Server Core supported with SP1 or later), Windows Server 2003 SP2
The .NET Framework does not support all versions of every platform. For a list of the supported versions, see .NET Framework System Requirements.
Note
Caution