ListViewGroupCollection Class
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.
Represents the collection of groups within a ListView control.
public ref class ListViewGroupCollection : System::Collections::IList
[System.ComponentModel.ListBindable(false)]
public class ListViewGroupCollection : System.Collections.IList
[<System.ComponentModel.ListBindable(false)>]
type ListViewGroupCollection = class
interface IList
interface ICollection
interface IEnumerable
Public Class ListViewGroupCollection
Implements IList
- Inheritance
-
ListViewGroupCollection
- Attributes
- Implements
Examples
The following example demonstrates how to use the ListView grouping feature to organize items by subitem value in the details view. This form of grouping is similar to the grouping used in Windows Explorer. In the example, the groups are created dynamically. For each subitem column, one group is created for each unique subitem value. For the parent item column, one group is created for each unique initial letter. Clicking the header of a column sorts the items into the groups created for that column. Clicking the same column header again reverses the order of the groups.
#using <mscorlib.dll>
#using <System.Drawing.dll>
#using <System.dll>
#using <System.Windows.Forms.dll>
using namespace System;
using namespace System::Collections;
using namespace System::Windows::Forms;
public ref class ListViewGroupsExample : public Form
{
private:
ListView^ myListView;
bool isRunningXPOrLater;
// Declare a Hashtable array in which to store the groups.
array<Hashtable^>^ groupTables;
// Declare a variable to store the current grouping column.
int groupColumn;
public:
ListViewGroupsExample()
{
groupColumn = 0;
// Initialize myListView.
myListView = gcnew ListView();
myListView->Dock = DockStyle::Fill;
myListView->View = View::Details;
myListView->Sorting = SortOrder::Ascending;
// Create and initialize column headers for myListView.
ColumnHeader^ columnHeader0 = gcnew ColumnHeader();
columnHeader0->Text = "Title";
columnHeader0->Width = -1;
ColumnHeader^ columnHeader1 = gcnew ColumnHeader();
columnHeader1->Text = "Author";
columnHeader1->Width = -1;
ColumnHeader^ columnHeader2 = gcnew ColumnHeader();
columnHeader2->Text = "Year";
columnHeader2->Width = -1;
// Add the column headers to myListView.
array<ColumnHeader^>^ temp0 = {columnHeader0, columnHeader1, columnHeader2};
myListView->Columns->AddRange(temp0);
// Add a handler for the ColumnClick event.
myListView->ColumnClick +=
gcnew ColumnClickEventHandler(this, &ListViewGroupsExample::myListView_ColumnClick);
// Create items and add them to myListView.
array<String^>^ temp1 = {"Programming Windows", "Petzold, Charles", "1998"};
ListViewItem^ item0 = gcnew ListViewItem( temp1 );
array<String^>^ temp2 = {"Code: The Hidden Language of Computer Hardware and Software",
"Petzold, Charles", "2000"};
ListViewItem^ item1 = gcnew ListViewItem( temp2 );
array<String^>^ temp3 = {"Programming Windows with C#", "Petzold, Charles", "2001"};
ListViewItem^ item2 = gcnew ListViewItem( temp3 );
array<String^>^ temp4 = {"Coding Techniques for Microsoft Visual Basic .NET",
"Connell, John", "2001"};
ListViewItem^ item3 = gcnew ListViewItem( temp4 );
array<String^>^ temp5 = {"C# for Java Developers", "Jones, Allen & Freeman, Adam",
"2002"};
ListViewItem^ item4 = gcnew ListViewItem( temp5 );
array<String^>^ temp6 = {"Microsoft .NET XML Web Services Step by Step",
"Jones, Allen & Freeman, Adam", "2002"};
ListViewItem^ item5 = gcnew ListViewItem( temp6 );
array<ListViewItem^>^ temp7 = {item0, item1, item2, item3, item4, item5};
myListView->Items->AddRange( temp7 );
// Determine whether Windows XP or a later
// operating system is present.
isRunningXPOrLater = false;
if (System::Environment::OSVersion->Version->Major > 5 ||
( System::Environment::OSVersion->Version->Major == 5 &&
System::Environment::OSVersion->Version->Minor >= 1) )
{
isRunningXPOrLater = true;
}
if (isRunningXPOrLater)
{
// Create the groupsTable array and populate it with one
// hash table for each column.
groupTables = gcnew array<Hashtable^>(myListView->Columns->Count);
for (int column = 0; column < myListView->Columns->Count; column++)
{
// Create a hash table containing all the groups
// needed for a single column.
groupTables[column] = CreateGroupsTable(column);
}
// Start with the groups created for the Title column.
SetGroups(0);
}
// Initialize the form.
this->Controls->Add(myListView);
this->Size = System::Drawing::Size(550, 330);
this->Text = "ListView Groups Example";
}
// Groups the items using the groups created for the clicked
// column.
private:
void myListView_ColumnClick(
Object^ /*sender*/, ColumnClickEventArgs^ e)
{
// Set the sort order to ascending when changing
// column groups; otherwise, reverse the sort order.
if ( myListView->Sorting == SortOrder::Descending ||
( isRunningXPOrLater && (e->Column != groupColumn) ) )
{
myListView->Sorting = SortOrder::Ascending;
}
else
{
myListView->Sorting = SortOrder::Descending;
}
groupColumn = e->Column;
// Set the groups to those created for the clicked column.
if (isRunningXPOrLater)
{
SetGroups(e->Column);
}
}
// Sets myListView to the groups created for the specified column.
private:
void SetGroups(int column)
{
// Remove the current groups.
myListView->Groups->Clear();
// Retrieve the hash table corresponding to the column.
Hashtable^ groups = dynamic_cast<Hashtable^>(groupTables[column]);
// Copy the groups for the column to an array.
array<ListViewGroup^>^ groupsArray = gcnew array<ListViewGroup^>(groups->Count);
groups->Values->CopyTo(groupsArray, 0);
// Sort the groups and add them to myListView.
Array::Sort(groupsArray, gcnew ListViewGroupSorter(myListView->Sorting));
myListView->Groups->AddRange(groupsArray);
// Iterate through the items in myListView, assigning each
// one to the appropriate group.
IEnumerator^ myEnum = myListView->Items->GetEnumerator();
while (myEnum->MoveNext())
{
ListViewItem^ item = safe_cast<ListViewItem^>(myEnum->Current);
// Retrieve the subitem text corresponding to the column.
String^ subItemText = item->SubItems[column]->Text;
// For the Title column, use only the first letter.
if (column == 0)
{
subItemText = subItemText->Substring(0, 1);
}
// Assign the item to the matching group.
item->Group = dynamic_cast<ListViewGroup^>(groups[subItemText]);
}
}
// Creates a Hashtable object with one entry for each unique
// subitem value (or initial letter for the parent item)
// in the specified column.
private:
Hashtable^ CreateGroupsTable(int column)
{
// Create a Hashtable object.
Hashtable^ groups = gcnew Hashtable();
// Iterate through the items in myListView.
IEnumerator^ myEnum1 = myListView->Items->GetEnumerator();
while (myEnum1->MoveNext())
{
ListViewItem^ item = safe_cast<ListViewItem^>(myEnum1->Current);
// Retrieve the text value for the column.
String^ subItemText = item->SubItems[column]->Text;
// Use the initial letter instead if it is the first column.
if (column == 0)
{
subItemText = subItemText->Substring(0, 1);
}
// If the groups table does not already contain a group
// for the subItemText value, add a new group using the
// subItemText value for the group header and Hashtable key.
if (!groups->Contains(subItemText))
{
groups->Add( subItemText, gcnew ListViewGroup(subItemText,
HorizontalAlignment::Left) );
}
}
// Return the Hashtable object.
return groups;
}
// Sorts ListViewGroup objects by header value.
ref class ListViewGroupSorter : public IComparer
{
private:
SortOrder order;
// Stores the sort order.
public:
ListViewGroupSorter(SortOrder theOrder)
{
order = theOrder;
}
// Compares the groups by header value, using the saved sort
// order to return the correct value.
virtual int Compare(Object^ x, Object^ y)
{
int result = String::Compare(
(dynamic_cast<ListViewGroup^>(x))->Header,
(dynamic_cast<ListViewGroup^>(y))->Header
);
if (order == SortOrder::Ascending)
{
return result;
}
else
{
return -result;
}
}
};
};
[STAThread]
int main()
{
Application::EnableVisualStyles();
Application::Run(gcnew ListViewGroupsExample());
}
using System;
using System.Collections;
using System.Windows.Forms;
public class ListViewGroupsExample : Form
{
private ListView myListView;
// Determine whether Windows XP or a later
// operating system is present.
private bool isRunningXPOrLater =
OSFeature.Feature.IsPresent(OSFeature.Themes);
// Declare a Hashtable array in which to store the groups.
private Hashtable[] groupTables;
// Declare a variable to store the current grouping column.
int groupColumn = 0;
public ListViewGroupsExample()
{
// Initialize myListView.
myListView = new ListView();
myListView.Dock = DockStyle.Fill;
myListView.View = View.Details;
myListView.Sorting = SortOrder.Ascending;
// Create and initialize column headers for myListView.
ColumnHeader columnHeader0 = new ColumnHeader();
columnHeader0.Text = "Title";
columnHeader0.Width = -1;
ColumnHeader columnHeader1 = new ColumnHeader();
columnHeader1.Text = "Author";
columnHeader1.Width = -1;
ColumnHeader columnHeader2 = new ColumnHeader();
columnHeader2.Text = "Year";
columnHeader2.Width = -1;
// Add the column headers to myListView.
myListView.Columns.AddRange(new ColumnHeader[]
{columnHeader0, columnHeader1, columnHeader2});
// Add a handler for the ColumnClick event.
myListView.ColumnClick +=
new ColumnClickEventHandler(myListView_ColumnClick);
// Create items and add them to myListView.
ListViewItem item0 = new ListViewItem( new string[]
{"Programming Windows",
"Petzold, Charles",
"1998"} );
ListViewItem item1 = new ListViewItem( new string[]
{"Code: The Hidden Language of Computer Hardware and Software",
"Petzold, Charles",
"2000"} );
ListViewItem item2 = new ListViewItem( new string[]
{"Programming Windows with C#",
"Petzold, Charles",
"2001"} );
ListViewItem item3 = new ListViewItem( new string[]
{"Coding Techniques for Microsoft Visual Basic .NET",
"Connell, John",
"2001"} );
ListViewItem item4 = new ListViewItem( new string[]
{"C# for Java Developers",
"Jones, Allen & Freeman, Adam",
"2002"} );
ListViewItem item5 = new ListViewItem( new string[]
{"Microsoft .NET XML Web Services Step by Step",
"Jones, Allen & Freeman, Adam",
"2002"} );
myListView.Items.AddRange(
new ListViewItem[] {item0, item1, item2, item3, item4, item5});
if (isRunningXPOrLater)
{
// Create the groupsTable array and populate it with one
// hash table for each column.
groupTables = new Hashtable[myListView.Columns.Count];
for (int column = 0; column < myListView.Columns.Count; column++)
{
// Create a hash table containing all the groups
// needed for a single column.
groupTables[column] = CreateGroupsTable(column);
}
// Start with the groups created for the Title column.
SetGroups(0);
}
// Initialize the form.
this.Controls.Add(myListView);
this.Size = new System.Drawing.Size(550, 330);
this.Text = "ListView Groups Example";
}
[STAThread]
static void Main()
{
Application.EnableVisualStyles();
Application.Run(new ListViewGroupsExample());
}
// Groups the items using the groups created for the clicked
// column.
private void myListView_ColumnClick(
object sender, ColumnClickEventArgs e)
{
// Set the sort order to ascending when changing
// column groups; otherwise, reverse the sort order.
if ( myListView.Sorting == SortOrder.Descending ||
( isRunningXPOrLater && (e.Column != groupColumn) ) )
{
myListView.Sorting = SortOrder.Ascending;
}
else
{
myListView.Sorting = SortOrder.Descending;
}
groupColumn = e.Column;
// Set the groups to those created for the clicked column.
if (isRunningXPOrLater)
{
SetGroups(e.Column);
}
}
// Sets myListView to the groups created for the specified column.
private void SetGroups(int column)
{
// Remove the current groups.
myListView.Groups.Clear();
// Retrieve the hash table corresponding to the column.
Hashtable groups = (Hashtable)groupTables[column];
// Copy the groups for the column to an array.
ListViewGroup[] groupsArray = new ListViewGroup[groups.Count];
groups.Values.CopyTo(groupsArray, 0);
// Sort the groups and add them to myListView.
Array.Sort(groupsArray, new ListViewGroupSorter(myListView.Sorting));
myListView.Groups.AddRange(groupsArray);
// Iterate through the items in myListView, assigning each
// one to the appropriate group.
foreach (ListViewItem item in myListView.Items)
{
// Retrieve the subitem text corresponding to the column.
string subItemText = item.SubItems[column].Text;
// For the Title column, use only the first letter.
if (column == 0)
{
subItemText = subItemText.Substring(0, 1);
}
// Assign the item to the matching group.
item.Group = (ListViewGroup)groups[subItemText];
}
}
// Creates a Hashtable object with one entry for each unique
// subitem value (or initial letter for the parent item)
// in the specified column.
private Hashtable CreateGroupsTable(int column)
{
// Create a Hashtable object.
Hashtable groups = new Hashtable();
// Iterate through the items in myListView.
foreach (ListViewItem item in myListView.Items)
{
// Retrieve the text value for the column.
string subItemText = item.SubItems[column].Text;
// Use the initial letter instead if it is the first column.
if (column == 0)
{
subItemText = subItemText.Substring(0, 1);
}
// If the groups table does not already contain a group
// for the subItemText value, add a new group using the
// subItemText value for the group header and Hashtable key.
if (!groups.Contains(subItemText))
{
groups.Add( subItemText, new ListViewGroup(subItemText,
HorizontalAlignment.Left) );
}
}
// Return the Hashtable object.
return groups;
}
// Sorts ListViewGroup objects by header value.
private class ListViewGroupSorter : IComparer
{
private SortOrder order;
// Stores the sort order.
public ListViewGroupSorter(SortOrder theOrder)
{
order = theOrder;
}
// Compares the groups by header value, using the saved sort
// order to return the correct value.
public int Compare(object x, object y)
{
int result = String.Compare(
((ListViewGroup)x).Header,
((ListViewGroup)y).Header
);
if (order == SortOrder.Ascending)
{
return result;
}
else
{
return -result;
}
}
}
}
Imports System.Collections
Imports System.Windows.Forms
Public Class ListViewGroupsExample
Inherits Form
Private myListView As ListView
' Determine whether Windows XP or a later
' operating system is present.
Private isRunningXPOrLater As Boolean = _
OSFeature.Feature.IsPresent(OSFeature.Themes)
' Declare a Hashtable array in which to store the groups.
Private groupTables() As Hashtable
' Declare a variable to store the current grouping column.
Private groupColumn As Integer = 0
Public Sub New()
' Initialize myListView.
myListView = New ListView()
myListView.Dock = DockStyle.Fill
myListView.View = View.Details
myListView.Sorting = SortOrder.Ascending
' Create and initialize column headers for myListView.
Dim columnHeader0 As New ColumnHeader()
columnHeader0.Text = "Title"
columnHeader0.Width = -1
Dim columnHeader1 As New ColumnHeader()
columnHeader1.Text = "Author"
columnHeader1.Width = -1
Dim columnHeader2 As New ColumnHeader()
columnHeader2.Text = "Year"
columnHeader2.Width = -1
' Add the column headers to myListView.
myListView.Columns.AddRange( New ColumnHeader() _
{columnHeader0, columnHeader1, columnHeader2} )
' Add a handler for the ColumnClick event.
AddHandler myListView.ColumnClick, AddressOf myListView_ColumnClick
' Create items and add them to myListView.
Dim item0 As New ListViewItem( New String() _
{"Programming Windows", _
"Petzold, Charles", _
"1998"} )
Dim item1 As New ListViewItem( New String() _
{"Code: The Hidden Language of Computer Hardware and Software", _
"Petzold, Charles", _
"2000"} )
Dim item2 As New ListViewItem( New String() _
{"Programming Windows with C#", _
"Petzold, Charles", _
"2001"} )
Dim item3 As New ListViewItem( New String() _
{"Coding Techniques for Microsoft Visual Basic .NET", _
"Connell, John", _
"2001"} )
Dim item4 As New ListViewItem( New String() _
{"C# for Java Developers", _
"Jones, Allen / Freeman, Adam", _
"2002"} )
Dim item5 As New ListViewItem( New String() _
{"Microsoft .NET XML Web Services Step by Step", _
"Jones, Allen / Freeman, Adam", _
"2002"} )
myListView.Items.AddRange( _
New ListViewItem() {item0, item1, item2, item3, item4, item5})
If isRunningXPOrLater
' Create the groupsTable array and populate it with one
' hash table for each column.
groupTables = New Hashtable(myListView.Columns.Count) {}
Dim column As Integer
For column = 0 To myListView.Columns.Count - 1
' Create a hash table containing all the groups
' needed for a single column.
groupTables(column) = CreateGroupsTable(column)
Next column
' Start with the groups created for the Title column.
SetGroups(0)
End If
' Initialize the form.
Me.Controls.Add(myListView)
Me.Size = New System.Drawing.Size(550, 330)
Me.Text = "ListView Groups Example"
End Sub
<STAThread()> _
Shared Sub Main()
Application.EnableVisualStyles()
Application.Run(New ListViewGroupsExample())
End Sub
' Groups the items using the groups created for the clicked
' column.
Private Sub myListView_ColumnClick( _
sender As Object, e As ColumnClickEventArgs)
' Set the sort order to ascending when changing
' column groups; otherwise, reverse the sort order.
If myListView.Sorting = SortOrder.Descending OrElse _
isRunningXPOrLater And e.Column <> groupColumn Then
myListView.Sorting = SortOrder.Ascending
Else
myListView.Sorting = SortOrder.Descending
End If
groupColumn = e.Column
' Set the groups to those created for the clicked column.
If isRunningXPOrLater Then
SetGroups(e.Column)
End If
End Sub
' Sets myListView to the groups created for the specified column.
Private Sub SetGroups(column As Integer)
' Remove the current groups.
myListView.Groups.Clear()
' Retrieve the hash table corresponding to the column.
Dim groups As Hashtable = CType(groupTables(column), Hashtable)
' Copy the groups for the column to an array.
Dim groupsArray(groups.Count - 1) As ListViewGroup
groups.Values.CopyTo(groupsArray, 0)
' Sort the groups and add them to myListView.
Array.Sort(groupsArray, New ListViewGroupSorter(myListView.Sorting))
myListView.Groups.AddRange(groupsArray)
' Iterate through the items in myListView, assigning each
' one to the appropriate group.
Dim item As ListViewItem
For Each item In myListView.Items
' Retrieve the subitem text corresponding to the column.
Dim subItemText As String = item.SubItems(column).Text
' For the Title column, use only the first letter.
If column = 0 Then
subItemText = subItemText.Substring(0, 1)
End If
' Assign the item to the matching group.
item.Group = CType(groups(subItemText), ListViewGroup)
Next item
End Sub
' Creates a Hashtable object with one entry for each unique
' subitem value (or initial letter for the parent item)
' in the specified column.
Private Function CreateGroupsTable(column As Integer) As Hashtable
' Create a Hashtable object.
Dim groups As New Hashtable()
' Iterate through the items in myListView.
Dim item As ListViewItem
For Each item In myListView.Items
' Retrieve the text value for the column.
Dim subItemText As String = item.SubItems(column).Text
' Use the initial letter instead if it is the first column.
If column = 0 Then
subItemText = subItemText.Substring(0, 1)
End If
' If the groups table does not already contain a group
' for the subItemText value, add a new group using the
' subItemText value for the group header and Hashtable key.
If Not groups.Contains(subItemText) Then
groups.Add( subItemText, New ListViewGroup(subItemText, _
HorizontalAlignment.Left) )
End If
Next item
' Return the Hashtable object.
Return groups
End Function 'CreateGroupsTable
' Sorts ListViewGroup objects by header value.
Private Class ListViewGroupSorter
Implements IComparer
Private order As SortOrder
' Stores the sort order.
Public Sub New(theOrder As SortOrder)
order = theOrder
End Sub
' Compares the groups by header value, using the saved sort
' order to return the correct value.
Public Function Compare(x As Object, y As Object) As Integer _
Implements IComparer.Compare
Dim result As Integer = String.Compare( _
CType(x, ListViewGroup).Header, _
CType(y, ListViewGroup).Header )
If order = SortOrder.Ascending Then
Return result
Else
Return -result
End If
End Function 'Compare
End Class
End Class
Remarks
Use the ListView.Groups property to get the ListViewGroupCollection associated with a ListView control. This collection contains the ListViewGroup objects that represent the groups shown in the control when the ListView.View property is set to a value other than View.List. Any items that are not assigned to a group will appear in the default group, which has the header label "DefaultGroup{0}". The default group is not contained in the ListView.Groups collection, and cannot be altered. It is primarily useful in debugging to ensure that all items have been properly added to groups. If there are no groups in the ListView.Groups collection, the grouping feature is disabled.
Use the Add method to add a single group to the collection. Use the Insert method to add a group at a particular index within the collection. To remove a group, use the Remove method. Use the RemoveAt method to remove the group at a particular index.
You cannot add a ListViewGroup to the collection more than once. To reposition a group within the collection, it must first be removed from the collection, and then inserted at the desired location. Use the Contains method to determine whether a particular group is already in the collection. To retrieve the index of a group within the collection, use the IndexOf method. You can get or set the group at a particular index with the Item[] indexer.
Use the AddRange method to add multiple groups to the collection. You can add multiple groups either as an array of groups or as a ListViewGroupCollection that you retrieve through the ListView.Groups property of another ListView control. Use the Clear method to remove all the groups from the collection.
Note
The Remove, RemoveAt, and Clear methods remove groups from the collection, but do not remove any items from the ListView control. If there are no groups in the ListView.Groups collection, the grouping feature is disabled and all items in the control are displayed normally.
The AddRange and Clear methods are useful when you want to provide multiple ways to group the items in a ListView control. To do this, create multiple group arrays. To change the grouping, first use the Clear method to remove all the groups from the collection, then use the AddRange method to add the next array of groups to display.
Use the CopyTo method to copy the groups in a collection to a compatible array starting at a specified index. This is useful, for example, when you want to sort the groups in the collection using the Array.Sort method. To do this, copy the groups into a compatible array, then sort the array. Next, use the Clear method to remove all the groups from the collection, then use the AddRange method to add the sorted array back to the collection.
Use the Count property to determine how many groups are in the collection. To iterate through the collection, use the IEnumerator returned from the GetEnumerator method.
Note
The grouping feature is available only on Windows XP and the Windows Server 2003 family when your application calls the Application.EnableVisualStyles method. On earlier operating systems, any code relating to groups will be ignored and the groups will not appear. As a result, any code that depends on the grouping feature might not work correctly. You might want to include a test that determines whether the grouping feature is available, and provide alternate functionality when it is unavailable. For example, you might want to provide alternate sorting when running on operating systems that do not support sorting by group.
The insertion mark feature is provided by the same library that provides the operating system themes feature. To check for the availability of this library, call the FeatureSupport.IsPresent(Object) method overload and pass in the OSFeature.Themes value.
Properties
Count |
Gets the number of groups in the collection. |
Item[Int32] |
Gets or sets the ListViewGroup at the specified index within the collection. |
Item[String] |
Gets or sets the ListViewGroup with the specified Name property value. |
Methods
Add(ListViewGroup) |
Adds the specified ListViewGroup to the collection. |
Add(String, String) |
Adds a new ListViewGroup to the collection using the specified values to initialize the Name and Header properties. |
AddRange(ListViewGroup[]) |
Adds an array of groups to the collection. |
AddRange(ListViewGroupCollection) |
Adds the groups in an existing ListViewGroupCollection to the collection. |
Clear() |
Removes all groups from the collection. |
Contains(ListViewGroup) |
Determines whether the specified group is located in the collection. |
CopyTo(Array, Int32) |
Copies the groups in the collection to a compatible one-dimensional Array, starting at the specified index of the target array. |
Equals(Object) |
Determines whether the specified object is equal to the current object. (Inherited from Object) |
GetEnumerator() |
Returns an enumerator used to iterate through the collection. |
GetHashCode() |
Serves as the default hash function. (Inherited from Object) |
GetType() |
Gets the Type of the current instance. (Inherited from Object) |
IndexOf(ListViewGroup) |
Returns the index of the specified ListViewGroup within the collection. |
Insert(Int32, ListViewGroup) |
Inserts the specified ListViewGroup into the collection at the specified index. |
MemberwiseClone() |
Creates a shallow copy of the current Object. (Inherited from Object) |
Remove(ListViewGroup) |
Removes the specified ListViewGroup from the collection. |
RemoveAt(Int32) |
Removes the ListViewGroup at the specified index within the collection. |
ToString() |
Returns a string that represents the current object. (Inherited from Object) |
Explicit Interface Implementations
ICollection.IsSynchronized |
Gets a value indicating whether access to the collection is synchronized (thread safe). |
ICollection.SyncRoot |
Gets an object that can be used to synchronize access to the collection. |
IList.Add(Object) |
Adds a new ListViewGroup to the ListViewGroupCollection. |
IList.Contains(Object) |
Determines whether the specified value is located in the collection. |
IList.IndexOf(Object) |
Returns the index within the collection of the specified value. |
IList.Insert(Int32, Object) |
Inserts a ListViewGroup into the ListViewGroupCollection. |
IList.IsFixedSize |
Gets a value indicating whether the collection has a fixed size. |
IList.IsReadOnly |
Gets a value indicating whether the collection is read-only. |
IList.Item[Int32] |
Gets or sets the ListViewGroup at the specified index within the collection. |
IList.Remove(Object) |
Removes the ListViewGroup from the ListViewGroupCollection. |
Extension Methods
Cast<TResult>(IEnumerable) |
Casts the elements of an IEnumerable to the specified type. |
OfType<TResult>(IEnumerable) |
Filters the elements of an IEnumerable based on a specified type. |
AsParallel(IEnumerable) |
Enables parallelization of a query. |
AsQueryable(IEnumerable) |
Converts an IEnumerable to an IQueryable. |