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Set the control to be created when dragging from the Data Sources window

Applies to: yesVisual Studio noVisual Studio for Mac

Note

This article applies to Visual Studio 2017. If you're looking for the latest Visual Studio documentation, see Visual Studio documentation. We recommend upgrading to the latest version of Visual Studio. Download it here

You can create data-bound controls by dragging items from the Data Sources window onto the WPF designer or Windows Forms designer. Each item in the Data Sources window has a default control that is created when you drag it to the designer. However, you can choose to create a different control.

Set the controls to be created for data tables or objects

Before you drag items that represent data tables or objects from the Data Sources window, you can choose to display all the data in one control, or to display each column or property in a separate control.

In this context, the term object refers to a custom business object, an entity (in an Entity Data Model), or an object returned by a service.

To set the controls to be created for data tables or objects

  1. Be sure the WPF designer or the Windows Forms designer is open.

  2. In the Data Sources window, select the item that represents the data table or object you want to set.

    Tip

    If the Data Sources window is not open, you can open it by selecting View > Other Windows > Data Sources.

  3. Click the drop-down menu for the item, and then click one of the following items in the menu:

    • To display each data field in a separate control, click Details. When you drag the data item to the designer, this action will create a different data-bound control for each column or property of the parent data table or object, along with labels for each control.

    • To display all of the data in a single control, select a different control in the list, such as DataGrid or List in a WPF application, or DataGridView in a Windows Forms application.

    The list of available controls depends on which designer you have open, which version of .NET your project targets, and whether you have added custom controls that support data binding to the Toolbox. If the control you want to create is not in the list of available controls, you can add the control to the list. For more information, see Add custom controls to the Data Sources window.

    To learn how to create a custom Windows Forms control that can be added to the list of controls for data tables or objects in the Data Sources window, see Create a Windows Forms user control that supports complex data binding.

Set the controls to be created for data columns or properties

Before you drag an item that represents a column or a property of an object from the Data Sources window to the designer, you can set the control to be created.

To set the controls to be created for columns or properties

  1. Be sure the WPF designer or the Windows Forms designer is open.

  2. In the Data Sources window, expand the desired table or object to display its columns or properties.

  3. Select each column or property for which you want to set the control to be created.

  4. Click the drop-down menu for the column or property, and then select the control you want to create when the item is dragged to the designer.

    The list of available controls depends on which designer you have open, which version of .NET your project targets, and which custom controls that support data binding you have added to the Toolbox. If the control you want to create is in the list of available controls, you can add the control to the list. For more information, see Add custom controls to the Data Sources window.

    To learn how to create a custom control that can be added to the list of controls for data columns or properties in the Data Sources window, see Create a Windows Forms user control that supports simple data binding.

    If you don't want to create a control for the column or property, select None in the drop-down menu. This is useful if you want to drag the parent table or object to the designer, but you do not want to include the specific column or property.

See also