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ListView.TopItem Property

Definition

Gets or sets the first visible item in the control.

public:
 property System::Windows::Forms::ListViewItem ^ TopItem { System::Windows::Forms::ListViewItem ^ get(); };
public:
 property System::Windows::Forms::ListViewItem ^ TopItem { System::Windows::Forms::ListViewItem ^ get(); void set(System::Windows::Forms::ListViewItem ^ value); };
[System.ComponentModel.Browsable(false)]
public System.Windows.Forms.ListViewItem TopItem { get; }
[System.ComponentModel.Browsable(false)]
public System.Windows.Forms.ListViewItem TopItem { get; set; }
[System.ComponentModel.Browsable(false)]
public System.Windows.Forms.ListViewItem? TopItem { get; set; }
[<System.ComponentModel.Browsable(false)>]
member this.TopItem : System.Windows.Forms.ListViewItem
[<System.ComponentModel.Browsable(false)>]
member this.TopItem : System.Windows.Forms.ListViewItem with get, set
Public ReadOnly Property TopItem As ListViewItem
Public Property TopItem As ListViewItem

Property Value

A ListViewItem that represents the first visible item in the control.

Attributes

Exceptions

The View property is set to LargeIcon, SmallIcon, or Tile.

Examples

The following code example demonstrates resetting the style of a ListViewItem object's subitems through the use of the TopItem property and the ListViewItem.ListViewSubItem.ResetStyle method. To run the example, paste the following code into a form containing a button named Button1 and call the InitializeListView method in the form's constructor or Load event handler.

internal:
   // Declare the Listview object.
   System::Windows::Forms::ListView^ myListView;

private:

   // Initialize the ListView object with subitems of a different
   // style than the default styles for the ListView.
   void InitializeListView()
   {
      // Set the Location, View and Width properties for the 
      // ListView object. 
      myListView = gcnew ListView;
      myListView->Location = System::Drawing::Point( 20, 20 );
      myListView->Width = 250;
      
      // The View property must be set to Details for the 
      // subitems to be visible.
      myListView->View = View::Details;
      
      // Each SubItem object requires a column, so add three columns.
      this->myListView->Columns->Add( "Key", 50, HorizontalAlignment::Left );
      this->myListView->Columns->Add( "A", 100, HorizontalAlignment::Left );
      this->myListView->Columns->Add( "B", 100, HorizontalAlignment::Left );
      
      // Add a ListItem object to the ListView.
      ListViewItem^ entryListItem = myListView->Items->Add( "Items" );
      
      // Set UseItemStyleForSubItems property to false to change 
      // look of subitems.
      entryListItem->UseItemStyleForSubItems = false;
      
      // Add the expense subitem.
      ListViewItem::ListViewSubItem ^ expenseItem = entryListItem->SubItems->Add( "Expense" );
      
      // Change the expenseItem object's color and font.
      expenseItem->ForeColor = System::Drawing::Color::Red;
      expenseItem->Font = gcnew System::Drawing::Font( "Arial",10,System::Drawing::FontStyle::Italic );
      
      // Add a subitem called revenueItem 
      ListViewItem::ListViewSubItem ^ revenueItem = entryListItem->SubItems->Add( "Revenue" );
      
      // Change the revenueItem object's color and font.
      revenueItem->ForeColor = System::Drawing::Color::Blue;
      revenueItem->Font = gcnew System::Drawing::Font( "Times New Roman",10,System::Drawing::FontStyle::Bold );
      
      // Add the ListView to the form.
      this->Controls->Add( this->myListView );
   }

   void Button1_Click( System::Object^ /*sender*/, System::EventArgs^ /*e*/ )
   {
      // Use the ListView.TopItem property to access the SubItems
      // and then reset their appearance.
      myListView->TopItem->SubItems[ 1 ]->ResetStyle();
      myListView->TopItem->SubItems[ 2 ]->ResetStyle();
   }

// Declare the Listview object.
internal System.Windows.Forms.ListView myListView;

// Initialize the ListView object with subitems of a different
// style than the default styles for the ListView.
private void InitializeListView()
{

    // Set the Location, View and Width properties for the 
    // ListView object. 
    myListView = new ListView();
    myListView.Location = new System.Drawing.Point(20, 20);
    myListView.Width = 250;

    // The View property must be set to Details for the 
    // subitems to be visible.
    myListView.View = View.Details;
    
    // Each SubItem object requires a column, so add three columns.
    this.myListView.Columns.Add("Key", 50, HorizontalAlignment.Left);
    this.myListView.Columns.Add("A", 100, HorizontalAlignment.Left);
    this.myListView.Columns.Add("B", 100, HorizontalAlignment.Left);

    // Add a ListItem object to the ListView.
    ListViewItem entryListItem = myListView.Items.Add("Items");

    // Set UseItemStyleForSubItems property to false to change 
    // look of subitems.
    entryListItem.UseItemStyleForSubItems = false;

    // Add the expense subitem.
    ListViewItem.ListViewSubItem expenseItem = 
        entryListItem.SubItems.Add("Expense");

    // Change the expenseItem object's color and font.
    expenseItem.ForeColor = System.Drawing.Color.Red;
    expenseItem.Font = new System.Drawing.Font(
        "Arial", 10, System.Drawing.FontStyle.Italic);

    // Add a subitem called revenueItem 
    ListViewItem.ListViewSubItem revenueItem = 
        entryListItem.SubItems.Add("Revenue");

    // Change the revenueItem object's color and font.
    revenueItem.ForeColor = System.Drawing.Color.Blue;
    revenueItem.Font = new System.Drawing.Font(
        "Times New Roman", 10, System.Drawing.FontStyle.Bold);

    // Add the ListView to the form.
    this.Controls.Add(this.myListView);
}

private void Button1_Click(System.Object sender, System.EventArgs e)
{

    // Use the ListView.TopItem property to access the SubItems
    // and then reset their appearance.
    myListView.TopItem.SubItems[1].ResetStyle();
    myListView.TopItem.SubItems[2].ResetStyle();
}

' Declare the Listview object.
Friend WithEvents myListView As System.Windows.Forms.ListView

' Initialize the ListView object with subitems of a different
' style than the default styles for the ListView.
Private Sub InitializeListView()

    ' Set the Location, View and Width properties for the 
    ' ListView object. 
    myListView = New ListView
    With (myListView)
        .Location = New System.Drawing.Point(20, 20)

        ' The View property must be set to Details for the 
        ' subitems to be visible.
        .View = View.Details
        .Width = 250
    End With

    ' Each SubItem object requires a column, so add three columns.
    Me.myListView.Columns.Add("Key", 50, HorizontalAlignment.Left)
    Me.myListView.Columns.Add("A", 100, HorizontalAlignment.Left)
    Me.myListView.Columns.Add("B", 100, HorizontalAlignment.Left)

    ' Add a ListItem object to the ListView.
    Dim entryListItem As ListViewItem = myListView.Items.Add("Items")

    ' Set UseItemStyleForSubItems property to false to change 
    ' look of subitems.
    entryListItem.UseItemStyleForSubItems = False

    ' Add the expense subitem.
    Dim expenseItem As ListViewItem.ListViewSubItem = _
        entryListItem.SubItems.Add("Expense")

    ' Change the expenseItem object's color and font.
    expenseItem.ForeColor = System.Drawing.Color.Red
    expenseItem.Font = New System.Drawing.Font _
        ("Arial", 10, System.Drawing.FontStyle.Italic)

    ' Add a subitem called revenueItem 
    Dim revenueItem As ListViewItem.ListViewSubItem = _
        entryListItem.SubItems.Add("Revenue")

    ' Change the revenueItem object's color and font.
    revenueItem.ForeColor = System.Drawing.Color.Blue
    revenueItem.Font = New System.Drawing.Font _
        ("Times New Roman", 10, System.Drawing.FontStyle.Bold)

    ' Add the ListView to the form.
    Me.Controls.Add(Me.myListView)
End Sub

Private Sub Button1_Click(ByVal sender As System.Object, ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles Button1.Click

    ' Use the ListView.TopItem property to access the SubItems
    ' and then reset their appearance.
    myListView.TopItem.SubItems(1).ResetStyle()
    myListView.TopItem.SubItems(2).ResetStyle()
End Sub

Remarks

Initially, the item with the index position of zero (0) is at the top of the ListView control. If the ListView control contents are scrolled, a different item can be at the top of the control. You can use this property to indicate or determine which item is visible at the top of the ListView control. The value of the TopItem property will not always persist, depending on where the desired top item is in the list view.

The number of items visible in a ListView control at any time depends on the height of the list view and the size of the items it contains. If the items exceed the height of the list view, the items will continue onto multiple pages, which the user can scroll through. If you set the TopItem property to an item in the last page of the ListView, the item will automatically be scrolled into view; however, TopItem will be set to the actual top item of the last page.

To ensure that a specific item is in the visible region of the control (but not necessarily in the top position), use the EnsureVisible method.

Note

Setting this property has no effect when the Scrollable property value is false.

Setting this property is not supported in versions of the .NET Framework prior to version 2.0.

Applies to

See also