TreeView.Scrollable 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 a value indicating whether the tree view control displays scroll bars when they are needed.
public:
property bool Scrollable { bool get(); void set(bool value); };
public bool Scrollable { get; set; }
member this.Scrollable : bool with get, set
Public Property Scrollable As Boolean
Property Value
true
if the tree view control displays scroll bars when they are needed; otherwise, false
. The default is true
.
Examples
The following code example demonstrates how to use the BorderStyle enumeration and the BorderStyle, ShowLines, Scrollable, HideSelection and ShowRootLines properties. To run this example, paste the following code in a form and call the InitializeTreeView
method in the form's constructor or Load
method.
// Declare the TreeView control.
internal:
System::Windows::Forms::TreeView^ TreeView1;
private:
// Initialize the TreeView to blend with the form, giving it the
// same color as the form and no border.
void InitializeTreeView()
{
// Create a new TreeView control and set the location and size.
this->TreeView1 = gcnew System::Windows::Forms::TreeView;
this->TreeView1->Location = System::Drawing::Point( 72, 48 );
this->TreeView1->Size = System::Drawing::Size( 200, 200 );
// Set the BorderStyle property to none, the BackColor property to
// the form's backcolor, and the Scrollable property to false.
// This allows the TreeView to blend in form.
this->TreeView1->BorderStyle = BorderStyle::None;
this->TreeView1->BackColor = this->BackColor;
this->TreeView1->Scrollable = false;
// Set the HideSelection property to false to keep the
// selection highlighted when the user leaves the control.
// This helps it blend with form.
this->TreeView1->HideSelection = false;
// Set the ShowRootLines and ShowLines properties to false to
// give the TreeView a list-like appearance.
this->TreeView1->ShowRootLines = false;
this->TreeView1->ShowLines = false;
// Add the nodes.
array<TreeNode^>^temp0 = {gcnew TreeNode( "Full Color" ),gcnew TreeNode( "Project Wizards" ),gcnew TreeNode( "Visual C# and Visual Basic Support" )};
array<TreeNode^>^temp1 = {gcnew TreeNode( "Pentium 133 MHz or faster processor " ),gcnew TreeNode( "Windows 98 or later" ),gcnew TreeNode( "100 MB Disk space" )};
array<TreeNode^>^temp2 = {gcnew TreeNode( "Features",temp0 ),gcnew TreeNode( "System Requirements",temp1 )};
this->TreeView1->Nodes->AddRange( temp2 );
// Set the tab index and add the TreeView to the form.
this->TreeView1->TabIndex = 0;
this->Controls->Add( this->TreeView1 );
}
// Declare the TreeView control.
internal System.Windows.Forms.TreeView TreeView1;
// Initialize the TreeView to blend with the form, giving it the
// same color as the form and no border.
private void InitializeTreeView()
{
// Create a new TreeView control and set the location and size.
this.TreeView1 = new System.Windows.Forms.TreeView();
this.TreeView1.Location = new System.Drawing.Point(72, 48);
this.TreeView1.Size = new System.Drawing.Size(200, 200);
// Set the BorderStyle property to none, the BackColor property to
// the form's backcolor, and the Scrollable property to false.
// This allows the TreeView to blend in form.
this.TreeView1.BorderStyle = BorderStyle.None;
this.TreeView1.BackColor = this.BackColor;
this.TreeView1.Scrollable = false;
// Set the HideSelection property to false to keep the
// selection highlighted when the user leaves the control.
// This helps it blend with form.
this.TreeView1.HideSelection = false;
// Set the ShowRootLines and ShowLines properties to false to
// give the TreeView a list-like appearance.
this.TreeView1.ShowRootLines = false;
this.TreeView1.ShowLines = false;
// Add the nodes.
this.TreeView1.Nodes.AddRange(new TreeNode[]
{new TreeNode("Features",
new TreeNode[]{
new TreeNode("Full Color"),
new TreeNode("Project Wizards"),
new TreeNode("Visual C# and Visual Basic Support")}),
new TreeNode("System Requirements",
new TreeNode[]{
new TreeNode("Pentium 133 MHz or faster processor "),
new TreeNode("Windows 98 or later"),
new TreeNode("100 MB Disk space")})
});
// Set the tab index and add the TreeView to the form.
this.TreeView1.TabIndex = 0;
this.Controls.Add(this.TreeView1);
}
' Declare the TreeView control.
Friend WithEvents TreeView1 As System.Windows.Forms.TreeView
' Initialize the TreeView to blend with the form, giving it the
' same color as the form and no border.
Private Sub InitializeTreeView()
' Create a new TreeView control and set the location and size.
Me.TreeView1 = New System.Windows.Forms.TreeView
Me.TreeView1.Location = New System.Drawing.Point(72, 48)
Me.TreeView1.Size = New System.Drawing.Size(200, 200)
' Set the BorderStyle property to none, the BackColor property to
' the form's backcolor, and the Scrollable property to false.
' This allows the TreeView to blend in form.
Me.TreeView1.BorderStyle = BorderStyle.None
Me.TreeView1.BackColor = Me.BackColor
Me.TreeView1.Scrollable = False
' Set the ShowRootLines and ShowLines properties to false to
' give the TreeView a list-like appearance.
Me.TreeView1.ShowRootLines = False
Me.TreeView1.ShowLines = False
' Add the nodes.
Me.TreeView1.Nodes.AddRange(New System.Windows.Forms.TreeNode() _
{New System.Windows.Forms.TreeNode("Features", _
New System.Windows.Forms.TreeNode() _
{New System.Windows.Forms.TreeNode("Full Color"), _
New System.Windows.Forms.TreeNode("Project Wizards"), _
New System.Windows.Forms.TreeNode("Visual C# and Visual Basic Support")}), _
New System.Windows.Forms.TreeNode("System Requirements", _
New System.Windows.Forms.TreeNode() _
{New System.Windows.Forms.TreeNode _
("Pentium 133 MHz or faster processor "), _
New System.Windows.Forms.TreeNode("Windows 98 or later"), _
New System.Windows.Forms.TreeNode("100 MB Disk space")})})
' Set the tab index and add the TreeView to the form.
Me.TreeView1.TabIndex = 0
Me.Controls.Add(Me.TreeView1)
End Sub
Remarks
If this property is set to true
, scroll bars are displayed on the TreeView when any TreeNode is located outside the control's client region.
Note
When setting the Scrollable property at run time, the TreeView handle is recreated (see Control.RecreateHandle) to update the control's appearance. This causes all tree nodes to be collapsed, with the exception of the selected TreeNode.