Determine the number of objects in a collection using the collection's Count property:
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' Set a variable equal to the number of Splits in C1TrueDBGrid1. variable = Me.C1TrueDBGrid1.Splits.Count |
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// Set a variable equal to the number of Splits in C1TrueDBGrid1. variable = this.c1TrueDBGrid1.Splits.Count; |
Iterate through all objects in a collection using the Count property as in the following example, which prints the Caption string of each C1DataColumn object in a grid:
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For n = 0 To Me.C1TrueDBGrid1.Columns.Count - 1 Debug.WriteLine(Me.C1TrueDBGrid1.Columns(n).Caption) Next n |
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for (n = 0; n < this.c1TrueDBGrid1.Columns.Count; n++) { Console.WriteLine(this.c1TrueDBGrid1.Columns[n].Caption); } |
The Count property is also useful for appending and removing columns:
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' Determine how many columns there are. Dim NumCols As Integer NumCols = Me.C1TrueDBGrid1.Columns.Count ' Append a column to the end of the Columns collection. Dim C As C1TrueDBGrid.C1DataColumn = New C1TrueDBGrid.C1DataColumn() Me.C1TrueDBGrid1.Columns.Insert(NumCols, C) ' Make the new column visible, since columns created at run timeare invisible by default. Me.C1TrueDBGrid1.Splits(0).DisplayColumns(C).Visible = True ' The following loop removes all columns from the grid. While Me.C1TrueDBGrid1.Columns.Count Me.C1TrueDBGrid1.Columns.RemoveAt(0) End While |
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// Determine how many columns there are. int NumCols; NumCols = this.c1TrueDBGrid1.Columns.Count; // Append a column to the end of the Columns collection. C1TrueDBGrid.C1DataColumn C = new C1TrueDBGrid.C1DataColumn(); this.c1TrueDBGrid1.Columns.Insert(NumCols, C); // Make the new column visible, since columns created at run time are invisible by default. this.c1TrueDBGrid1.Splits[0].DisplayColumns[C].Visible = true; // The following loop removes all columns from the grid. while ( this.c1TrueDBGrid1.Columns.Count > 0 ) { this.c1TrueDBGrid1.Columns.RemoveAt(0); } |
An efficient For Each...Next statement that can be used iterate through the objects in a collection without using the Count property:
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Dim C As C1TrueDBGrid.C1DataColumn For Each C In Me.C1TrueDBGrid1.Columns Debug.WriteLine(C.Caption) Next S |
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C1TrueDBGrid.C1DataColumn c; foreach (c In this.c1TrueDBGrid1.Columns) { Console.WriteLine(c); } |
In fact, using the For Each...Next statement is the easiest way to iterate through the objects in a collection.