Binding b = new Binding( "Value", person, "BdayNullable", true );
dtBirthdayNullable.DataBindings.Add( b );
b.Format += new ConvertEventHandler( dtBirthdayNullable_Format );
b.Parse += new ConvertEventHandler( dtBirthdayNullable_Parse );
void dtBirthdayNullable_Format( object sender, ConvertEventArgs e )
{
// e.Value is the object value, we format it to be what we want to show up in the control
Binding b = sender as Binding;
if ( b != null )
{
DateTimePicker dtp = (b.Control as DateTimePicker);
if ( dtp != null )
{
if ( e.Value == DBvalue.value )
{
dtp.ShowCheckBox = true;
dtp.Checked = false;
// have to set e.Value to SOMETHING, since it's coming in as NULL
// if i set to DateTime.Today, and that's DIFFERENT than the control's current
// value, then it triggers a CHANGE to the value, which CHECKS the box (not ok)
// the trick - set e.Value to whatever value the control currently has.
// This does NOT cause a CHANGE, and the checkbox stays OFF.
e.Value = dtp.Value;
}
else
{
dtp.ShowCheckBox = true;
dtp.Checked = true;
// leave e.Value unchanged - it's not null, so the DTP is fine with it.
}
}
}
}
void dtBirthdayNullable_Parse( object sender, ConvertEventArgs e )
{
// e.value is the formatted value coming from the control.
// we change it to be the value we want to stuff in the object.
Binding b = sender as Binding;
if ( b != null )
{
DateTimePicker dtp = (b.Control as DateTimePicker);
if ( dtp != null )
{
if ( dtp.Checked == false )
{
dtp.ShowCheckBox = true;
dtp.Checked = false;
e.Value = DBvalue.Value
}
else
{
DateTime val = Convert.ToDateTime( e.Value );
e.Value =val;
}
}
}
}
i found a good solution here
http://blogs.interknowlogy.com/danhanan/archive/2007/01/21/10847.aspx
another perfect solution here
http://www.mofeel.net/70-microsoft-public-dotnet-framework-windowsforms/8806.aspx
DateTimePicker
s can't be set to null because DateTime
can't be null, but you can set them to DateTime.MinValue
which is the default value for an uninitialized DateTime
. And then you just check if the dtp.Value = DateTime.MinValue
and if so, treat it as null.
However, if you want to really distinguish when no value has been selected, the easiest way is to set DateTimePicker.ShowCheckBox
to true, and then you check dtp.Checked
and if it's true, you read the value, otherwise you treat it as a null.