ListView.View Property
Definition
Important
Some information relates to prerelease product that may be substantially modified before it’s released. Microsoft makes no warranties, express or implied, with respect to the information provided here.
Gets or sets an object that defines how the data is styled and organized in a ListView control.
public:
property System::Windows::Controls::ViewBase ^ View { System::Windows::Controls::ViewBase ^ get(); void set(System::Windows::Controls::ViewBase ^ value); };
public System.Windows.Controls.ViewBase View { get; set; }
member this.View : System.Windows.Controls.ViewBase with get, set
Public Property View As ViewBase
Property Value
A ViewBase object that specifies how to display information in the ListView.
Examples
The following example shows how to specify a GridView object as the View for a ListView control.
ListView myListView = new ListView();
GridView myGridView = new GridView();
myGridView.AllowsColumnReorder = true;
myGridView.ColumnHeaderToolTip = "Employee Information";
GridViewColumn gvc1 = new GridViewColumn();
gvc1.DisplayMemberBinding = new Binding("FirstName");
gvc1.Header = "FirstName";
gvc1.Width = 100;
myGridView.Columns.Add(gvc1);
GridViewColumn gvc2 = new GridViewColumn();
gvc2.DisplayMemberBinding = new Binding("LastName");
gvc2.Header = "Last Name";
gvc2.Width = 100;
myGridView.Columns.Add(gvc2);
GridViewColumn gvc3 = new GridViewColumn();
gvc3.DisplayMemberBinding = new Binding("EmployeeNumber");
gvc3.Header = "Employee No.";
gvc3.Width = 100;
myGridView.Columns.Add(gvc3);
//ItemsSource is ObservableCollection of EmployeeInfo objects
myListView.ItemsSource = new myEmployees();
myListView.View = myGridView;
myStackPanel.Children.Add(myListView);
Dim myListView As New ListView()
Dim myGridView As New GridView()
myGridView.AllowsColumnReorder = True
myGridView.ColumnHeaderToolTip = "Employee Information"
Dim gvc1 As New GridViewColumn()
gvc1.DisplayMemberBinding = New Binding("FirstName")
gvc1.Header = "FirstName"
gvc1.Width = 100
myGridView.Columns.Add(gvc1)
Dim gvc2 As New GridViewColumn()
gvc2.DisplayMemberBinding = New Binding("LastName")
gvc2.Header = "Last Name"
gvc2.Width = 100
myGridView.Columns.Add(gvc2)
Dim gvc3 As New GridViewColumn()
gvc3.DisplayMemberBinding = New Binding("EmployeeNumber")
gvc3.Header = "Employee No."
gvc3.Width = 100
myGridView.Columns.Add(gvc3)
'ItemsSource is ObservableCollection of EmployeeInfo objects
myListView.ItemsSource = New myEmployees()
myListView.View = myGridView
myStackPanel.Children.Add(myListView)
<ListView.View>
<GridView AllowsColumnReorder="true"
ColumnHeaderToolTip="Employee Information">
<GridViewColumn DisplayMemberBinding=
"{Binding Path=FirstName}"
Header="First Name" Width="100"/>
<GridViewColumn DisplayMemberBinding=
"{Binding Path=LastName}"
Width="100">
<GridViewColumnHeader>Last Name
<GridViewColumnHeader.ContextMenu>
<ContextMenu MenuItem.Click="LastNameCM_Click"
Name="LastNameCM">
<MenuItem Header="Ascending" />
<MenuItem Header="Descending" />
</ContextMenu>
</GridViewColumnHeader.ContextMenu>
</GridViewColumnHeader>
</GridViewColumn>
<GridViewColumn DisplayMemberBinding=
"{Binding Path=EmployeeNumber}"
Header="Employee No." Width="100"/>
</GridView>
</ListView.View>
Remarks
The .NET Framework environment includes the configurable view mode named GridView. You can also create a custom view that inherits from ViewBase. For more information, see How to: Create a Custom View Mode for a ListView.
Dependency Property Information
Identifier field | ViewProperty |
Metadata properties set to true |
None |
Note
The type of property metadata for this property is PropertyMetadata, not FrameworkPropertyMetadata.
Applies to
See also
意見反應
https://aka.ms/ContentUserFeedback。
即將登場:在 2024 年,我們將逐步淘汰 GitHub 問題作為內容的意見反應機制,並將它取代為新的意見反應系統。 如需詳細資訊,請參閱:提交並檢視相關的意見反應