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Creating a Custom Report Item Design-Time Component

A custom report item design-time component is a control that can be used in the Visual Studio Report Designer environment. The custom report item design-time component provides an activated design surface that can accept drag-and-drop operations, integration with the Visual Studio property browser, and the ability to provide custom property editors.

With a custom report item design-time component, the user can position a custom report item on a report in the design environment, set custom data properties on the custom report item, and then save the custom report item as part of the report project.

The properties that are set using the design-time component in the development environment are serialized and deserialized by the host design environment and then stored as elements in the Report Definition Language (RDL) file. When the report is executed by the report processor, the properties that are set using the design-time component are passed by the report processor to a custom report item run-time component, which renders the custom report item and passes it back to the report processor.

Note

The custom report item design-time component is implemented as a Microsoft.NET Framework component. This document will describe implementation details specific to the custom report item design-time component. For more information about developing components using the .NET Framework, see Components in Visual Studio in the MSDN library.

Implementing a Design-Time Component

The main class of a custom report item design-time component is inherited from the Microsoft.ReportDesigner.CustomReportItemDesigner class. In addition to the standard attributes used for a .NET Framework control, your component class should define a CustomReportItem attribute. This attribute must correspond to the name of the custom report item as it is defined in the reportserver.config file. For a list of .NET Framework attributes, see Attributes in the .NET Framework SDK documentation.

The following code example shows attributes being applied to a custom report item design-time control:

namespace PolygonsCRI
{
    [LocalizedName("Polygons")]
    [Editor(typeof(CustomEditor), typeof(ComponentEditor))]
        [ToolboxBitmap(typeof(PolygonsDesigner),"Polygons.ico")]
        [CustomReportItem("Polygons")]

    public class PolygonsDesigner : CustomReportItemDesigner
    {
...

Initializing the Component

You pass user-specified properties for a custom report item using a Microsoft.ReportDesigner.CustomData class. Your implementation of the CustomReportItemDesigner class should override the InitializeNewComponent method to create a new instance of your component's CustomData class and set it to default values.

The following code example shows an example of a custom report item design-time component class overriding the CustomReportItemDesigner.InitializeNewComponent method to initialize the component's CustomData class:

public override void InitializeNewComponent()
        {
            CustomData = new CustomData();
            CustomData.DataRowHierarchy = new DataHierarchy();

            // Shape grouping
            CustomData.DataRowHierarchy.DataMembers.Add(new DataMember());
            CustomData.DataRowHierarchy.DataMembers[0].Group = new Group();
            CustomData.DataRowHierarchy.DataMembers[0].Group.Name = Name + "_Shape";
            CustomData.DataRowHierarchy.DataMembers[0].Group.GroupExpressions.Add(new ReportExpression());

            // Point grouping
            CustomData.DataRowHierarchy.DataMembers[0].DataMembers.Add(new DataMember());
            CustomData.DataRowHierarchy.DataMembers[0].DataMembers[0].Group = new Group();
            CustomData.DataRowHierarchy.DataMembers[0].DataMembers[0].Group.Name = Name + "_Point";
            CustomData.DataRowHierarchy.DataMembers[0].DataMembers[0].Group.GroupExpressions.Add(new ReportExpression());

            // Static column
            CustomData.DataColumnHierarchy = new DataHierarchy();
            CustomData.DataColumnHierarchy.DataMembers.Add(new DataMember());

            // Points
            IList<IList<DataValue>> dataValues = new List<IList<DataValue>>();
            CustomData.DataRows.Add(dataValues);
            CustomData.DataRows[0].Add(new List<DataValue>());
            CustomData.DataRows[0][0].Add(NewDataValue("X", ""));
            CustomData.DataRows[0][0].Add(NewDataValue("Y", ""));
        }

Modifying Component Properties

You can modify CustomData properties in the design environment in several ways. You can modify any properties that are exposed by the design-time component that are marked with the BrowsableAttribute attribute by using the Visual Studio property browser. In addition, you can modify properties by dragging items onto the custom report item's design surface, or by right-clicking the control in the design environment and selecting Properties on the shortcut menu to display a custom properties window.

The following code example shows a Microsoft.ReportDesigner.CustomData property that has the BrowsableAttribute attribute applied:

[Browsable(true), Category("Data")]
public string DataSetName
{
      get
      {
         return CustomData.DataSetName;
      }
      set
      {
         CustomData.DataSetName = value;
      }
   }

You can provide your design-time component with a custom properties editor dialog box. The custom property editor implementation should inherit from the ComponentEditor class, and it should create an instance of a dialog box that can be used for property editing.

The following example shows an implementation of a class that inherits from ComponentEditor and displays a custom property editor dialog box:

internal sealed class CustomEditor : ComponentEditor
{
   public override bool EditComponent(
      ITypeDescriptorContext context, object component)
    {
     PolygonsDesigner designer = (PolygonsDesigner)component;
     PolygonProperties dialog = new PolygonProperties();
     dialog.m_designerComponent = designer;
     DialogResult result = dialog.ShowDialog();
     if (result == DialogResult.OK)
     {
        designer.Invalidate();
        designer.ChangeService().OnComponentChanged(designer, null, null, null);
        return true;
     }
     else
        return false;
    }
}

Your custom property editor dialog box can invoke the Report Designer Expression Editor. In the following example, the Expression Editor is invoked when the user selects the first element in the combo box:

private void EditableCombo_SelectedIndexChanged(object sender, 
    EventArgs e)
{
   ComboBox combo = (ComboBox)sender;
   if (combo.SelectedIndex == 0 && m_launchEditor)
   {
      m_launchEditor = false;
      ExpressionEditor editor = new ExpressionEditor();
      string newValue;
      newValue = (string)editor.EditValue(null, m_designerComponent.Site, m_oldComboValue);
      combo.Items[0] = newValue;
   }
}

Using Designer Verbs

A designer verb is a menu command linked to an event handler. You can add designer verbs that will appear in a component's shortcut menu when your custom report item run-time control is being used in the design environment. You can return the list of available designer verbs from your run-time component by using the Verbs property.

The following code example shows a designer verb and an event handler being added to the DesignerVerbCollection, as well as the event handler code:

public override DesignerVerbCollection Verbs
{
    get
    {
        if (m_verbs == null)
        {
            m_verbs = new DesignerVerbCollection();
            m_verbs.Add(new DesignerVerb("Proportional Scaling", new EventHandler(OnProportionalScaling)));
         m_verbs[0].Checked = (GetCustomProperty("poly:Proportional") == bool.TrueString);
        }

        return m_verbs;
    }
}

private void OnProportionalScaling(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
   bool proportional = !
        (GetCustomProperty("poly:Proportional") == bool.TrueString);
   m_verbs[0].Checked = proportional;
   SetCustomProperty("poly:Proportional", proportional.ToString());
   ChangeService().OnComponentChanged(this, null, null, null);
   Invalidate();
}

Using Adornments

Custom report item classes can also implement a Microsoft.ReportDesigner.Design.Adornment class. An adornment allows the custom report item control to provide areas outside the main rectangle of the design surface. These areas can handle user interface events, such as mouse clicks and drag-and-drop operations. The Adornment class that is defined in the Reporting Services Microsoft.ReportDesigner namespace is a pass-through implementation of the Adorner class found in Windows Forms. For complete documentation on the Adorner class, see Behavior Service Overview in the MSDN library. For sample code that implements a Microsoft.ReportDesigner.Design.Adornment class, see SQL Server Reporting Services Product Samples.

For more information about programming and using Windows Forms in Visual Studio, see these topics in the MSDN Library:

  • Design-Time Attributes for Components

  • Components in Visual Studio

  • Walkthrough: Creating a Windows Forms Control that Takes Advantage of Visual Studio Design-Time Features