Reputation: 459
This may be something covered in C# 101 but I haven't been able to find an easy to understand answer to this question anywhere on google or stack overflow. Is there a better way to return a text value from a combobox without using this crappy work around I came up with?
private void test_site_SelectionChanged(object sender, SelectionChangedEventArgs e)
{
string cmbvalue = "";
cmbvalue = this.test_site.SelectedValue.ToString();
string[] cmbvalues = cmbvalue.Split(new char[] { ' ' });
MessageBox.Show(cmbvalues[1]);
}
Please don't rail on me to hard I'm really just now picking up c# and OOP.
Upvotes: 7
Views: 10345
Reputation: 11
On load events put
DependencyPropertyDescriptor dpd = DependencyPropertyDescriptor.FromProperty(ComboBox.TextProperty, typeof(ComboBox));
dpd.AddValueChanged(cmbChungChi, OnTextChanged);
And get text via funtion
private void OnTextChanged(object sender, EventArgs args)
{
txtName.Text = cmbChungChi.Text;
}
Good luck.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 74802
It looks like you have ComboBoxItems in your ComboBox, so that SelectedValue is returning a ComboBoxItem and ToString is therefore returning something like ComboBox SomeValue
.
If that's the case, you can get the content using ComboBoxItem.Content:
ComboBoxItem selectedItem = (ComboBoxItem)(test_site.SelectedValue);
string value = (string)(selectedItem.Content);
However, a better approach is, instead of populating the ComboBox with a collection of ComboBoxItems, to set ComboBox.ItemsSource to the desired collection of strings:
test_site.ItemsSource = new string[] { "Alice", "Bob", "Carol" };
Then SelectedItem will get you the currently selected string directly.
string selectedItem = (string)(test_site.SelectedItem);
Upvotes: 14