Blue Theme Orange Theme Green Theme Red Theme
 
Discover the top 5 tips for understanding .NET Interop
Home | Forums | Videos | Advertise | Certifications | Downloads | Blogs | Interviews | Jobs | Beginners | Training
 | Consulting  
Submit an Article Submit a Blog 
 Jump to
Skip Navigation Links
TechnologyExpand Technology
WebsiteExpand Website
Nevron Chart
Search :       Advanced Search »
Home » WPF » TextBox in WPF

TextBox in WPF

This article demonstrates how to create and use a TextBox control in WPF using XAML and C#.

Author Rank :
Page Views : 7880
Downloads : 67
Rating :
 Rate it
Level : Beginner
   Print Read/Post comments Post a comment  Similar Articles  
   Email to a friend  Bookmark  Author's other articles  
Download Files:
WPFTextBox.zip
 
 
6 Months Free & No Setup Fees ASP.NET Hosting!
Become a Sponsor
 Tag Cloud
 Latest Jobs
More ... 
 Latest Interview Questions
More ... 


WPF TextBox Control

This article demonstrates how to create and use a TextBox control in WPF using XAML and C#.

Creating a TextBox

The TextBox element represents a WPF TextBox control in XAML.

<TextBox/>

The Width and Height attributes of the TextBox element represent the width and the height of a TextBox. The Text property of the TextBox element sets the content of a TextBox. The x:Name attribute represents the name of the control, which is a unique identifier of a control.

The code snippet in Listing 1 creates a TextBox control and sets the name, height, width, and content of a TextBox control.

<TextBox x:Name="TextBox1" Height="30" Width="200"
        Text="Hello! This is TextBox Eample.">
</TextBox>

Listing 1

The output looks like Figure 1.



Figure 1

As you can see from Figure 1, by default the TextBox is place in the center of the page. We can place a TextBox control where we want by using the Margin, VerticalAlignment and HorizontalAlignment attributes that sets the margin, vertical alignment, and horizontal alignment of a control.

The code snippet in Listing 2 sets the position of the TextBox control in the left top corner of the page.

<TextBox x:Name="TextBox1" Height="30" Width="200"
        Text="Hello! This is TextBox Eample."
        Margin="10,10,0,0" VerticalAlignment="Top"
        HorizontalAlignment="Left">

</
TextBox>

Listing 2

Formatting a TextBox

The BorderBrush property of the TextBox sets a brush to draw the border of a TextBox. You may use any brush to fill the border. The code snippet in Listing 3 uses a linear gradient brush to draw the border with a combination of red and blue color.

<TextBox x:Name="TextBox1" Height="30" Width="200"
        Text="Hello! This is TextBox Eample."
        Margin="10,10,0,0" VerticalAlignment="Top"
        HorizontalAlignment="Left">
            <TextBox.BorderBrush>
                <LinearGradientBrush StartPoint="0,0" EndPoint="1,1" >
                    <GradientStop Color="Green" Offset="0" />
                    <GradientStop Color="Yellow" Offset="1.0" />
                </LinearGradientBrush>
            </TextBox.BorderBrush>
 </TextBox>

The output looks like Figure 2



Figure 2

Listing 3

The Background and Foreground properties of the TextBox set the background and foreground colors of a TextBox. You may use any brush to fill the border. The following code snippet uses linear gradient brushes to draw the background and foreground of a TextBox.

<TextBox x:Name="TextBox1" Height="30" Width="200"
        Text="Hello! This is TextBox Eample."
        Margin="10,10,0,0" VerticalAlignment="Top"
        HorizontalAlignment="Left">
            <TextBox.BorderBrush>
                <LinearGradientBrush StartPoint="0,0" EndPoint="1,1" >
                    <GradientStop Color="Green" Offset="0" />
                    <GradientStop Color="Yellow" Offset="1.0" />
                </LinearGradientBrush>
            </TextBox.BorderBrush>
            <TextBox.Background>
                <LinearGradientBrush StartPoint="0,0" EndPoint="1,1" >
                    <GradientStop Color="RosyBrown" Offset="0.1" />
                    <GradientStop Color="RoyalBlue" Offset="0.25" />
                    <GradientStop Color="Bisque" Offset="0.75" />
                    <GradientStop Color="MediumOrchid" Offset="1.0" />
                </LinearGradientBrush>
            </TextBox.Background>
            <TextBox.Foreground>
                <LinearGradientBrush StartPoint="0,0" EndPoint="1,1" >
                    <GradientStop Color="Orange" Offset="0.25" />
                    <GradientStop Color="Black" Offset="1.0" />
                </LinearGradientBrush>
            </TextBox.Foreground>
        </TextBox>

The new TextBox looks like Figure 3.



Figure 3

Setting Image as Background of a TextBox

To set an image as background of a TextBox, we can set an image as the Background of the TextBox. The code snippet in Listing 4 sets the background of a TextBox to an image.
<TextBox.Background>
                <ImageBrush ImageSource="Raj 022.JPG" />
</TextBox.Background>

Listing 4

The new output looks like Figure 4.



Figure 4

Creating a TextBox Dynamically

The code listed in Listing 5 creates a TextBox control programmatically. First, it creates a TextBox object and sets its width, height, contents, background and foreground and later the TextBox is added to the LayoutRoot.

private void CreateATextBox()
{
    TextBox txtb= new TextBox();
    txtb.Height = 50;
    txtb.Width = 200;
    txtb.Text = "Text Box content";
    txtb.Background = new SolidColorBrush(Colors.Orange);
    txtb.Foreground = new SolidColorBrush(Colors.Black);
    LayoutRoot.Children.Add(txtb);
}

Listing 5

Setting Fonts of TextBox Contents

The FontSize, FontFamily, FontWeight, FontStyle, and FontStretch properties are used to set the font size, family, weight, style and stretch to the text of a TextBox. The code snippet in Listing 6 sets the font properties of a TextBox.

FontSize="14" FontFamily="Verdana" FontWeight="Bold"

Listing 6

The new output looks like Figure 5.



Figure 5

The FontSource property allows loading custom fonts dynamically. The following code snippet sets the FontSource property.

Uri fontUri = new Uri("SomeFont.ttf", UriKind.Relative);
StreamResourceInfo MySRI = Application.GetResourceStream(fontUri);
TextBox1.FontSource =
new FontSource(MySRI.Stream);

Non Editable TextBox

The IsReadOnly property of the TextBox sets the text box read only. By default, it is false.

IsReadOnly="True"

Restricting Text Size of a TextBox

The MaxLength property of the TextBox sets the number of characters allowed to input in a text box.

MaxLength="250"

Scrolling, Alignment, and Wrapping

The HorizontalScrollBarVisibility and VerticalScrollBarVisibility properties are used to set horizontal and vertical scroll bars of a TextBox, which is of type ScrollBarVisibility enumeration. The ScrollBarVisibility enumeration has four values are Disabled, Auto, Hidden, and Visible. The following code snippet sets the horizontal and vertical scroll bars visible in a TextBox.

HorizontalScrollBarVisibility="Visible"
VerticalScrollBarVisibility="Auto"

The TextWrapping property sets the wrap of no warp text. The following code snippet sets the wrapping text option.

TextWrapping="Wrap"

The TextAlignment property sets the text alignment in a TextBox, which is of type TextAlignment enumeration. A text can be aligned left, center, or right.

TextAlignment="Right"

The AcceptReturn property sets if the return is accepted in a TextBox or not.

AcceptsReturn="True"

Listing 7 shows all these properties in a complete sample.

<TextBox x:Name="TextBox2" Margin="10,10,50,0"
         Width="300" Height="150"
         HorizontalScrollBarVisibility="Visible"
         VerticalScrollBarVisibility="Visible"
         TextWrapping="Wrap"
         TextAlignment="Right"
         MaxLength="500"
         IsReadOnly="False"
         AcceptsReturn="True" >           
</TextBox>

Listing 7

Selection in TextBox

The Select and SelectAll methods are used to select text in a TextBox. The Select method select a text range in a TextBox and the SelectAll method select all text in a TextBox.

The SelectionBackground and SelectionForeground properties set the background and foreground colors of the selected text. The SelectedText property returns the selected text in a TextBox.

The code in Listing 8 sets the selected text background and foreground properties and on button click event handler, returns the selected text of the TextBox.

private void TextBox2Functionality()
{
    string textBoxData =  "Hey I am a text with scrolling and return functionality.";
    textBoxData += " You can select text it me and get the selected data. ";
    textBoxData += " How about setting background and foreground color of the selected text?. ";
    textBoxData += " Maximum lenght and a lot more to offer. ";
    textBoxData += " You can select text it me and get the selected data. ";
    textBoxData += " You can select text it me and get the selected data. ";
    textBoxData += " Also sets the selection background and foreground ";
    textBoxData += " Set font size and the font name. ";
    textBoxData += " You can select text it me and get the selected data. ";
    textBoxData += " Also sets the selection background and foreground ";
    textBoxData += " Set font size and the font name. ";
    textBoxData += " You can select text it me and get the selected data. ";

    TextBox2.Text = textBoxData;
    TextBox2.FontFamily = new FontFamily("Georgia");
    TextBox2.FontSize = 12;
    TextBox2.SelectionBackground = new SolidColorBrush(Colors.Blue);
    TextBox2.SelectionForeground = new SolidColorBrush(Colors.White);
    TextBox2.SelectionStart = 100;
    TextBox2.SelectionLength = 200;
}
private void Button_Click(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
  MessageBox.Show(TextBox2.SelectedText);
}

Listing 8

The new output looks like Figure 6.



Figure 6

Summary

In this article, I discussed how we can create and format a TextBox control in WPF and C#. After that we saw how to create a TextBox control dynamically. Then we saw how to set various properties of a TextBox such as making it non editable, restrict the size of text, and set the foreground an d background of the selected text.

Comment Request!
Thank you for reading this post. Please post your feedback, question, or comments about this post Here.
Login to add your contents and source code to this article
 [Top] Rate this article
 
 About the author
 
Author
Looking for C# Consulting?
C# Consulting is founded in 2002 by the founders of C# Corner. Unlike a traditional consulting company, our consultants are well-known experts in .NET and many of them are MVPs, authors, and trainers. We specialize in Microsoft .NET development and utilize Agile Development and Extreme Programming practices to provide fast pace quick turnaround results. Our software development model is a mix of Agile Development, traditional SDLC, and Waterfall models.
Click here to learn more about C# Consulting.
 
Introducing MaxV - one click. infinite control. Hyper-V Hosting from MaximumASP.
Finally – a virtual platform that delivers next-generation Windows Server 2008 Hyper-V virtualization technology from a managed hosting partner you can truly depend on. Visit www.maximumasp.com/max for a FREE 30 day trial. Hurry offer ends soon. Climb aboard the MaxV platform and take advantage of High Availability, Intelligent Monitoring, Recurrent Backups, and Scalability – with no hassle or hidden fees. As a managed hosting partner focused solely on Microsoft technologies since 2000, MaximumASP is uniquely qualified to provide the superior support that our business is built on. Unparalleled expertise with Microsoft technologies lead to working directly with Microsoft as first to offer IIS 7 and SQL 2008 betas in a hosted environment; partnering in the Go Live Program for Hyper-V; and product co-launches built on WS 2008 with Hyper-V technology.
Dynamic PDF
ceTE software specializes in components for dynamic PDF generation and manipulation. The DynamicPDF™ product line allows you to dynamically generate PDF documents, merge PDF documents and new content to existing PDF documents from within your applications.
Discover the Top 5 .NET Memory Management Fundamentals
To write the best .NET code, you need to know exactly how the .NET framework really manages memory. Ricky Leeks presents the Top 5 fundamental facts of .NET memory management. Learn more.
Nevron Chart for .NET 2010.1 Now Available
The leading .NET charting control now features PDF, Flash and Silverlight export, visualization of large datasets and more. Deliver true charting functionality to your BI, Scorecard, Presentation or Scientific apps. Download evaluation now.
ASP.NET 4 Hosting
Get 2 Months Free of ASP.NET Hosting for Only $4.95/month! Receive FREE MS SQL and MySQL Databases Including ASP.NET 4/3.5, MVC 3.0, Silverlight 4, Windows 2008/IIS 7.0 Plus FREE IIS 7 Modules. Host UNLIMITED ASP.NET Web Sites – Click Here!
 
 Post a Feedback, Comment, or Question about this article
Subject:
Comment:
Nevron Chart
Become a Sponsor
 Comments
Need Help by Dorababu On March 7, 2011
I would like to set the First property at Run time if text box is empty how can. The one which was in Figure 2
Reply | Email | Modify 
Team Foundation Server Hosting
 © 2012  contents copyright of their authors. Rest everything copyright Mindcracker. All rights reserved.