Control.DragEnter Event
Definition
Important
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Occurs when an object is dragged into the control's bounds.
public:
event System::Windows::Forms::DragEventHandler ^ DragEnter;
public event System.Windows.Forms.DragEventHandler DragEnter;
public event System.Windows.Forms.DragEventHandler? DragEnter;
member this.DragEnter : System.Windows.Forms.DragEventHandler
Public Custom Event DragEnter As DragEventHandler
Event Type
Examples
The following code example demonstrates a drag-and-drop operation between two ListBox controls. The example calls the DoDragDrop method when the drag action starts. The drag action starts if the mouse has moved more than SystemInformation.DragSize from the mouse location during the MouseDown event. The IndexFromPoint method is used to determine the index of the item to drag during the MouseDown
event.
The example also demonstrates using custom cursors for the drag-and-drop operation. The example requires that two cursor files, 3dwarro.cur
and 3dwno.cur
, exist in the application directory, for the custom drag and no-drop cursors, respectively. The custom cursors will be used if the UseCustomCursorsCheck
CheckBox is checked. The custom cursors are set in the GiveFeedback event handler.
The keyboard state is evaluated in the DragOver event handler for the right ListBox
, to determine what the drag operation will be based on state of the SHIFT, CTRL, ALT, or CTRL+ALT keys. The location in the ListBox
where the drop would occur is also determined during the DragOver
event. If the data to drop is not a String
, then the DragEventArgs.Effect is set to None
in DragDropEffects. Finally, the status of the drop is displayed in the DropLocationLabel
Label.
The data to drop for the right ListBox
is determined in the DragDrop event handler and the String
value is added at the appropriate place in the ListBox
. If the drag operation moves outside the bounds of the form, then the drag-and-drop operation is canceled in the QueryContinueDrag event handler.
This code excerpt demonstrates using the DragEnter event. See the DoDragDrop method for the complete code example.
void ListDragTarget_DragEnter( Object^ /*sender*/, System::Windows::Forms::DragEventArgs^ /*e*/ )
{
// Reset the label text.
DropLocationLabel->Text = "None";
}
private void ListDragTarget_DragEnter(object sender, DragEventArgs e)
{
// Reset the label text.
DropLocationLabel.Text = "None";
}
Private Sub ListDragTarget_DragEnter(ByVal sender As Object, ByVal e As DragEventArgs) Handles ListDragTarget.DragEnter
' Reset the label text.
DropLocationLabel.Text = "None"
End Sub
Remarks
The DragEnter event is raised when the user first drags the mouse cursor over the control during a drag-and-drop operation.
Note
In versions earlier than .NET Framework 2.0, if you put a UserControl with DragEnter and DragDrop events on a Windows Form and drag and drop something onto the UserControl at design time, the DropDrop
and DropEnter
events are raised. However, when you close and reopen the solution, the DragEnter and DragDrop events are not raised again.
The following describes how and when events related to drag-and-drop operations are raised.
The DoDragDrop method determines the control under the current cursor location. It then checks to see if the control is a valid drop target.
If the control is a valid drop target, the GiveFeedback event is raised with the drag-and-drop effect specified. For a list of drag-and-drop effects, see the DragDropEffects enumeration.
Changes in the mouse cursor position, keyboard state, and mouse button state are tracked.
If the user moves out of a window, the DragLeave event is raised.
If the mouse enters another control, the DragEnter for that control is raised.
If the mouse moves but stays within the same control, the DragOver event is raised.
If there is a change in the keyboard or mouse button state, the QueryContinueDrag event is raised and determines whether to continue the drag, to drop the data, or to cancel the operation based on the value of the Action property of the event's QueryContinueDragEventArgs.
If the value of DragAction is
Continue
, the DragOver event is raised to continue the operation and the GiveFeedback event is raised with the new effect so appropriate visual feedback can be set. For a list of valid drop effects, see the DragDropEffects enumeration.Note
The DragOver and GiveFeedback events are paired so that as the mouse moves across the drop target, the user is given the most up-to-date feedback on the mouse's position.
If the value of DragAction is
Drop
, the drop effect value is returned to the source, so the source application can perform the appropriate operation on the source data; for example, cut the data if the operation was a move.If the value of DragAction is
Cancel
, the DragLeave event is raised.Note
The X and Y properties of the DragEventArgs are in screen coordinates, not client coordinates. The following line of Visual C# code converts the properties to a client Point.
Point clientPoint = targetControl.PointToClient(new Point(de.X, de.Y));
For more information about handling events, see Handling and Raising Events.