Reputation: 327
I'm not sure how i would capture the row selected by a mouse click and then press a button to delete that selected row in a stringGrid in delphi.
procedure DeleteRow(Grid: TStringGrid; ARow: Integer);
var
i: Integer;
begin
for i := ARow to Grid.RowCount - 2 do
Grid.Rows[i].Assign(Grid.Rows[i + 1]);
Grid.RowCount := Grid.RowCount - 1;
end;
procedure TManageUsersForm.RemoveRowButtonClick(Sender: TObject);
var
Recordposition : integer;
begin
UserStringGrid.Options := UserStringGrid.Options + [goEditing];
UserStringGrid.Options := UserStringGrid.Options + [goRowSelect];
end;
So the first procedure is for deleting a row and the second makes sure when a user clicks a cell the whole row is highlighted not just that 1 cell.
The mouse click is the most important part!!
Thank You :)
Upvotes: 1
Views: 4347
Reputation: 54792
The mouse click is not the most important part. Users can select a row either by keyboard or mouse, it doesn't matter, you'd just want to delete the current row. In the case of a mouse click, or otherwise, you can get the current row by Row
.
procedure DeleteCurrentRow(Grid: TStringGrid);
var
i: Integer;
begin
for i := Grid.Row to Grid.RowCount - 2 do
Grid.Rows[i].Assign(Grid.Rows[i + 1]);
Grid.RowCount := Grid.RowCount - 1;
end;
Call it like;
DeleteCurrentRow(UserStringGrid);
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 30715
I imagine the problem you might be having is to work out which grid row the user has clicked on. One way is:
procedure TForm1.StringGrid1Click(Sender: TObject);
var
StringGrid : TStringGrid;
Row : Integer;
GridRect : TGridRect;
begin
// The Sender argument to StringGrid1Click is actually the StringGrid itself,
// and the following "as" cast lets you assign it to the StringGrid local variable
// in a "type-safe" way, and access its properties and methods via the temporary variable
StringGrid := Sender as TStringGrid;
// Now we can retrieve the use selection
GridRect := StringGrid.Selection;
// and hence the related GridRect
// btw, the value returned for Row automatically takes account of
// the number of FixedRows, if any, of the grid
Row := GridRect.Top;
Caption := IntToStr(Row);
{ ...}
end;
See the OLH about TGridRect.
Hopefully the above will be sufficient to get you going - you've obvious already got most of the way yourself. Or, you could try the method suggested in the other answer, which is a little more "direct" but this way might be a bit more instructive as a "how to". Your choice ...
Upvotes: 2