Uredi

Deli z drugimi prek


DataGridView.CellMouseClick Event

Definition

Occurs whenever the user clicks anywhere on a cell with the mouse.

public:
 event System::Windows::Forms::DataGridViewCellMouseEventHandler ^ CellMouseClick;
public event System.Windows.Forms.DataGridViewCellMouseEventHandler CellMouseClick;
public event System.Windows.Forms.DataGridViewCellMouseEventHandler? CellMouseClick;
member this.CellMouseClick : System.Windows.Forms.DataGridViewCellMouseEventHandler 
Public Custom Event CellMouseClick As DataGridViewCellMouseEventHandler 

Event Type

Examples

The following code example demonstrates the use of this member. In the example, an event handler reports on the occurrence of the CellMouseClick event. This report helps you to learn when the event occurs and can assist you in debugging. To report on multiple events or on events that occur frequently, consider replacing MessageBox.Show with Console.WriteLine or appending the message to a multiline TextBox.

To run the example code, paste it into a project that contains an instance of type DataGridView named DataGridView1. Then ensure that the event handler is associated with the CellMouseClick event.

private void DataGridView1_CellMouseClick(Object sender, DataGridViewCellMouseEventArgs e) {

System.Text.StringBuilder messageBoxCS = new System.Text.StringBuilder();
messageBoxCS.AppendFormat("{0} = {1}", "ColumnIndex", e.ColumnIndex );
messageBoxCS.AppendLine();
messageBoxCS.AppendFormat("{0} = {1}", "RowIndex", e.RowIndex );
messageBoxCS.AppendLine();
messageBoxCS.AppendFormat("{0} = {1}", "Button", e.Button );
messageBoxCS.AppendLine();
messageBoxCS.AppendFormat("{0} = {1}", "Clicks", e.Clicks );
messageBoxCS.AppendLine();
messageBoxCS.AppendFormat("{0} = {1}", "X", e.X );
messageBoxCS.AppendLine();
messageBoxCS.AppendFormat("{0} = {1}", "Y", e.Y );
messageBoxCS.AppendLine();
messageBoxCS.AppendFormat("{0} = {1}", "Delta", e.Delta );
messageBoxCS.AppendLine();
messageBoxCS.AppendFormat("{0} = {1}", "Location", e.Location );
messageBoxCS.AppendLine();
MessageBox.Show(messageBoxCS.ToString(), "CellMouseClick Event" );
}
Private Sub DataGridView1_CellMouseClick(sender as Object, e as DataGridViewCellMouseEventArgs) _ 
     Handles DataGridView1.CellMouseClick

    Dim messageBoxVB as New System.Text.StringBuilder()
    messageBoxVB.AppendFormat("{0} = {1}", "ColumnIndex", e.ColumnIndex)
    messageBoxVB.AppendLine()
    messageBoxVB.AppendFormat("{0} = {1}", "RowIndex", e.RowIndex)
    messageBoxVB.AppendLine()
    messageBoxVB.AppendFormat("{0} = {1}", "Button", e.Button)
    messageBoxVB.AppendLine()
    messageBoxVB.AppendFormat("{0} = {1}", "Clicks", e.Clicks)
    messageBoxVB.AppendLine()
    messageBoxVB.AppendFormat("{0} = {1}", "X", e.X)
    messageBoxVB.AppendLine()
    messageBoxVB.AppendFormat("{0} = {1}", "Y", e.Y)
    messageBoxVB.AppendLine()
    messageBoxVB.AppendFormat("{0} = {1}", "Delta", e.Delta)
    messageBoxVB.AppendLine()
    messageBoxVB.AppendFormat("{0} = {1}", "Location", e.Location)
    messageBoxVB.AppendLine()
    MessageBox.Show(messageBoxVB.ToString(),"CellMouseClick Event")

End Sub

Remarks

This event occurs when the user clicks using any of the mouse buttons. Use the MouseEventArgs.Button property to determine which button was clicked.

To detect clicks on the contents of a cell, such as a button or link within a cell, use the CellContentClick event.

The handler for this event receives the column index and row index of the mouse pointer position.

For clicks in a DataGridViewCheckBoxCell, this event occurs before the check box changes value, so if you do not want to calculate the expected value based on the current value, you will typically handle the CellValueChanged event instead. Because that event occurs only when the user-specified value is committed, which typically occurs when focus leaves the cell, you must also handle the CurrentCellDirtyStateChanged event. In that handler, if the current cell is a check box cell, call the CommitEdit method and pass in the Commit value.

For more information about how to handle events, see Handling and Raising Events.

Applies to

See also