Reputation: 65
I've been reading stackoverflow for a while now just to learn, and I've come across a situation where I can finally ask a question. I'm making a Simon Says type memory game, where I flash shapes at the user, and the user has to click a button in the same order the shapes were shown to them. I want to draw the shape that I'm drawing on the screen within the button that they are clicking because it's much easier to remember and compare shapes to shapes rather than shapes to a button that says the shapes name.
Hopefully my question is clear, and thanks for taking a look!
Upvotes: 4
Views: 5611
Reputation: 127
The code above is great, however you can click outside the circle within a square containing the circle and get the click event. If you want to capture the click only if the user clicks inside the shape you have to set the region property with something like this
public partial class Form1 : Form
{
public Form1()
{
InitializeComponent();
}
private void Form1_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
GraphicsPath gp = new GraphicsPath();
gp.AddEllipse(0, 0, 100, 100);
Button1.Region = new Region(gp);
}
}
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 2817
Why not using PictureBox instead of Buttons. you have just to add your task to its event/OnClick Of course you can load any Image to any PictureBox in runtime
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 4125
In my example,
I have a pictureBox to show, two buttons, one to control, one to be drawn.
//odd display, even draw
int count = 0;
Image storePicture;
//whenever the background image changed,store it
private void pictureBoxShow_BackgroundImageChanged(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
//you can stored to a Image array if you have series pictures to show
storePicture = pictureBoxShow.BackgroundImage;
}
private void buttonControl_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
count++;
//odd show picture, even draw picture on button
if (count % 2 == 1)
pictureBoxShow.BackgroundImage = new Bitmap("shapes.JPG");
else
{
//in case you want to clear text on the button
buttonDrawn.Text = null;
//recreate the picture so that it fit the button size
buttonDrawn.Image = new Bitmap(storePicture, new Size(buttonDrawn.Width, buttonDrawn.Height));
}
}
Please remember to attach the handlers to corresponding events. ^^
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 28708
Yes, you can set the Image property of Button. Alternatively, you can draw non-rectangular buttons, that is, buttons of any shape. The following code demonstrates both techniques:
using System;
using System.Drawing;
using System.Windows.Forms;
class ShapeButton : Button {
public Action<PaintEventArgs> DoPaint { get; set; }
protected override void OnPaint(PaintEventArgs e) {
if (DoPaint != null) { DoPaint(e); }
}
}
static class Program {
static void Main() {
// Ellipse button
ShapeButton ellipseButton = new ShapeButton();
ellipseButton.Location = new Point(10, 10);
ellipseButton.Size = new Size(80, 80);
ellipseButton.DoPaint = delegate(PaintEventArgs e) {
Graphics graphics = e.Graphics;
SolidBrush brush1 = new SolidBrush(SystemColors.ButtonFace);
graphics.FillRectangle(brush1, 0, 0, ellipseButton.Width, ellipseButton.Height);
SolidBrush brush2 = new SolidBrush(Color.Red);
graphics.FillEllipse(brush2, 0, 0, ellipseButton.Width, ellipseButton.Height);
};
ellipseButton.Click += delegate(object sender, EventArgs e) {
MessageBox.Show("Ellipse!");
};
// Triangle button
ShapeButton triangleButton = new ShapeButton();
triangleButton.Location = new Point(100, 10);
triangleButton.Size = new Size(80, 80);
triangleButton.DoPaint = delegate(PaintEventArgs e) {
Graphics graphics = e.Graphics;
SolidBrush brush1 = new SolidBrush(SystemColors.ButtonFace);
graphics.FillRectangle(brush1, 0, 0, triangleButton.Width, triangleButton.Height);
SolidBrush brush2 = new SolidBrush(Color.Green);
Point[] points = {
new Point(triangleButton.Width / 2, 0),
new Point(0, triangleButton.Height),
new Point(triangleButton.Width, triangleButton.Height)
};
graphics.FillPolygon(brush2, points);
};
triangleButton.Click += delegate(object sender, EventArgs e) {
MessageBox.Show("Triangle!");
};
// Star button (using image)
Button starButton = new Button();
starButton.Location = new Point(190, 10);
starButton.Size = new Size(80, 80);
starButton.Image = new Bitmap("Star.png");
starButton.Click += delegate(object sender, EventArgs e) {
MessageBox.Show("Star!");
};
// The form
Form form = new Form();
form.Text = "Shape Button Test";
form.ClientSize = new Size(280, 100);
form.Controls.Add(ellipseButton);
form.Controls.Add(triangleButton);
form.Controls.Add(starButton);
form.ShowDialog();
}
}
Result (after clicking on the triangle button):
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 8792
In winforms to change the button's image at runtime you can use something like this:
button1.Image = new Bitmap(Image.FromFile(@"Pictures\Koala.jpg"));
It should be added to event handler. For example if you want to show the image when the button is clicked you subscribe to Click event of the button and add the code into the handler method:
private void button1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
button1.Image = new Bitmap(Image.FromFile(@"Pictures\Koala.jpg"));
}
Upvotes: 1