You can set a cell to display date and time and only allow user inputs of date and time using the date-time cell. You determine the format of the date and time to display.
You use the DateTimeCellType class to set the date-time cell and its properties.
The default values use the Regional Settings or Regional Options in the Windows environment. You can specify the format using several properties. For a complete list of date and time formats, refer to the DateTimeFormat enumeration and the DateTimeFormat property. If a date time cell displays dates and times in long date and time format, and the current date and time is "10/29/2002 11:10:01", the Text property returns "Tuesday, October 29, 2002 11:10:01 AM" as the formatted data of the cell. The Value property returns the date-time object of that date and time.
The date-time cell also has an EditorValue property that allows you to determine what is written to the data model.
By default, in a date-time cell, if you double-click on the cell in edit mode at run-time, a pop-up calendar (or clock) appears. You can determine whether to allow this, and you can specify the text that displays on the OK and Cancel buttons. For more information, refer to Customizing the Pop-Up Date-Time Control.
Spread uses the TimeDefault property to fill in the time portion that is not set into the cell. When you use the popup calendar to set the date for the cell, the time is set to midnight. If you want a different time, you would need to use the SubEditorClosed event and change the value in the cell. (You can also create your own sub-editor to create a clock and calendar form to pop up for the cell.) You can look in ISubEditor interface for more information on how to implement this. As for the value, the Value property returns is a DateTime object that encapsulates both the date and time. Query the TimeOfDay property from the returned DateTime object to get the time of day.
For more information on the properties and methods of this cell type, refer to the DateTimeCellType class.
Display the date as Tuesday, March 04 (day of week, month and number of day) in the second row, second column cell.
C# |
Copy Code
|
---|---|
FarPoint.Win.Spread.CellType.DateTimeCellType datecell = new FarPoint.Win.Spread.CellType.DateTimeCellType(); datecell.DateSeparator = " | "; datecell.TimeSeparator = "."; datecell.DateTimeFormat = FarPoint.Win.Spread.CellType.DateTimeFormat.ShortDateWithTime; datecell.MaximumDate = new System.DateTime(2100, 1, 1); datecell.MinimumDate = new System.DateTime(1990, 12, 31); datecell.MaximumTime = new System.TimeSpan(15, 59, 59); datecell.MinimumTime = new System.TimeSpan(11, 0, 0); fpSpread1.ActiveSheet.Columns[1].Width = 175; fpSpread1.ActiveSheet.Cells[1, 1].CellType = datecell; fpSpread1.ActiveSheet.Cells[1, 1].Value = System.DateTime.Now; |
VB |
Copy Code
|
---|---|
Dim datecell As New FarPoint.Win.Spread.CellType.DateTimeCellType() datecell.DateSeparator = " | " datecell.TimeSeparator = "." datecell.DateTimeFormat = FarPoint.Win.Spread.CellType.DateTimeFormat.ShortDateWithTime datecell.MaximumDate = new System.DateTime(2100, 1, 1) datecell.MinimumDate = new System.DateTime(1990, 12, 31) datecell.MaximumTime = new System.TimeSpan(15, 59, 59) datecell.MinimumTime = new System.TimeSpan(11, 0, 0) fpSpread1.ActiveSheet.Columns(1).Width = 175 fpSpread1.ActiveSheet.Cells(1, 1).CellType = datecell fpSpread1.ActiveSheet.Cells(1, 1).Value = System.DateTime.Now |
Or right-click on the cell or cells and select Cell Type. From the list, select DateTime. In the CellType editor, set the properties you need. Click Apply.