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Creating notepad.exe in Visual C++ (I suspect) would have taken some time, but creating notepad in C# and .NET took less than a week. This notepad, however, is a bit more powerful in that it allows you to open and edit multiple files. It also has the added functionality of viewing recent files, print preview, and a few other niceties lacking in notepad, such as the ability to hit Ctrl-F3 to look for the next occurrence of the selected text. There are many features we could examine in the development of Notepad.NET. In this article we will talk about a class I created for this application called TextBoxPrinter that allows you to print the contents of a multiline textbox.
Figure 1 - NotePad.NET
The design for Notepad.NET is illustrated below with the help of the WithClass UML Tool. The MRUMenuItem was borrowed from Jan Wiggers article on code project, but slightly modified to allow persistence to the config file with the help of the ConfigHandler. I've included the ConfigHandler, MRUMenuItem, and TextBoxPrinter classes in the download so you can utilize them in your own projects.

Figure 2 - UML Design of NotePad.NET Reverse Engineered using WithClass UML Tool
The TextBoxPrinter class is a very simple class that possesses all of its functionality in the Print method. The Print method takes the following parameters: a printer Graphics object for drawing on, a TextBox to extract the text, a PrintDocument to get printer settings, and a screenResolution to scale fonts and margins. The Print method steps through each line in the TextBox and draws it to the Graphics Object surface. Before it draws the line, it measures the font string and fits it to a layout rectangle. When the line reaches the end of the page, the Print method sets the HasMorePages flag to prompt the printer to continue printing to the next page.
/// <summary> /// Go through each line of the text box and print it /// </summary> /// <param name="txtSurface"></param> public bool Print(Graphics g, TextBox txtSurface, PrintDocument printer, float screenResolution) { Font textFont = txtSurface.Font; // go line by line and draw each string int startIndex = _lastIndex; int index = txtSurface.Text.IndexOf("\n", startIndex); int nextPosition = (int)_lastPosition; // just use the default string format StringFormat sf = new StringFormat(); // sf.FormatFlags = StringFormatFlags.NoClip | // (~StringFormatFlags.NoWrap ); // get the page height int lastPagePosition = (int)(((printer.DefaultPageSettings.PaperSize.Height/100.0f) - 1.0f) * (float)screenResolution); // use the screen resolution for measuring the page int resolution = (int)screenResolution; // calculate the maximum width in inches from the default paper size and the margin int maxwidth = (int)((printer.DefaultPageSettings.PaperSize.Width/100.0f - _printMargin*2)*resolution); // get the margin in inches int printMarginInPixels = resolution * _printMargin; Rectangle rtLayout = new Rectangle(0,0,0,0);| int lineheight = 0; while (index != -1) { // get the next line in the text box string nextLine = txtSurface.Text.Substring(startIndex, index - startIndex); // calculate the line height based on the font, string, and maximum line width lineheight = (int)(g.MeasureString(nextLine, textFont, maxwidth, sf).Height); // produce a new layout rectangle for the string rtLayout = new Rectangle(printMarginInPixels, nextPosition, maxwidth, lineheight); // draw the line to the printer g.DrawString(nextLine, textFont, Brushes.Black, rtLayout,sf); // advance to the next line position, leaving 3 pixel padding nextPosition += (int)(lineheight + 3); startIndex = index + 1; // find the position of the end of the next line index = txtSurface.Text.IndexOf("\n", startIndex); // if the next line position is greater than the last position on the page, return true to indicate more pages if (nextPosition > lastPagePosition) { _lastPosition = (int)screenResolution; _lastIndex = index; return true; // reached end of page } } // draw the last line in the document string lastLine = txtSurface.Text.Substring(startIndex); lineheight = (int)(g.MeasureString(lastLine, textFont, maxwidth, sf).Height); rtLayout = new Rectangle(printMarginInPixels, nextPosition, maxwidth, lineheight); g.DrawString(lastLine, textFont, Brushes.Black, rtLayout, sf); _lastPosition = (int)screenResolution; _lastIndex = 0; return false; // finished printing }
The TextBoxPrinter's Print method is called from the PrintPage event handler of the PrintDocument. This event will continue to be called for each printed page until all the lines of the text box are exhausted:
private void printDocument1_PrintPage(object sender, System.Drawing.Printing.PrintPageEventArgs e) { // Print the contents of the text box. Continue // printing until all lines in the textbox are exhausted. e.HasMorePages = _textBoxPrinter.Print(e.Graphics, txtPad, printDocument1, _screenResolutionX); }
Conclusion
The TextBoxPrinter class illustrates how you can print any text to a printer using .NET. It shows you how to size the text to the printed page, how to allow room for margins, and how to continue printing to multiple pages. Also, I hope you find Notepad.NET useful as a text editing tool. Now you can juggle multiple notes with the power of .NET.
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Mike Gold
Michael Gold is President of Microgold Software Inc., makers of the WithClass UML Tool. His company is a Microsoft VBA Partner and Borland Partner. Mike is a Microsoft MVP and founding member of C# Corner. He has a BSEE and MEng EE from Cornell University and has consulted for Chase Manhattan Bank, JP Morgan, Merrill Lynch, and Charles Schwab. Currently he is a senior developer at Finisar Corp. He has been involved in several .NET book projects, and is currently working on a book for using .NET with embedded systems. He can be reached at mike@c-sharpcorner.com
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