Malfist
Malfist

Reputation: 31785

Acting only on text input in a KeyPress Event

I have a key press event, and I want the combobox to handle the keypress if the input is not textual. I.E. If it is the up or down key, let the combobox handle it like it normally would, but if it's punctuation, or alphanumeric I want to act on it.

I thought Char.IsControl(e.KeyChar)) would do the trick, but it doesn't catch the arrow keys, and for a combobox, that's important.

Upvotes: 3

Views: 3463

Answers (2)

Mohammad Chamanpara
Mohammad Chamanpara

Reputation: 2159

You don't need to check no textual characters.

I hope the following code helps :

void ComboBox_KeyPress(object sender, KeyPressEventArgs e)
{
    if(Char.IsNumber(e.KeyChar))
        ...
    else if(Char.IsLetter(e.KeyChar))
        ...
}

Upvotes: 0

TheTXI
TheTXI

Reputation: 37875

Here is an example I had from a previous answer I gave. It came from the MSDN documentation and I think you should be able to modify it nicely based on which characters you want to allow or disallow:

// Boolean flag used to determine when a character other than a number is entered.
private bool nonNumberEntered = false;

// Handle the KeyDown event to determine the type of character entered into the control.
private void textBox1_KeyDown(object sender, System.Windows.Forms.KeyEventArgs e)
{
    // Initialize the flag to false.
    nonNumberEntered = false;

    // Determine whether the keystroke is a number from the top of the keyboard.
    if (e.KeyCode < Keys.D0 || e.KeyCode > Keys.D9)
    {
        // Determine whether the keystroke is a number from the keypad.
        if (e.KeyCode < Keys.NumPad0 || e.KeyCode > Keys.NumPad9)
        {
            // Determine whether the keystroke is a backspace.
            if(e.KeyCode != Keys.Back)
            {
                // A non-numerical keystroke was pressed.
                // Set the flag to true and evaluate in KeyPress event.
                nonNumberEntered = true;
            }
        }
    }
    //If shift key was pressed, it's not a number.
    if (Control.ModifierKeys == Keys.Shift) {
        nonNumberEntered = true;
    }
}

// This event occurs after the KeyDown event and can be used to prevent
// characters from entering the control.
private void textBox1_KeyPress(object sender, System.Windows.Forms.KeyPressEventArgs e)
{
    // Check for the flag being set in the KeyDown event.
    if (nonNumberEntered == true)
    {
        // Stop the character from being entered into the control since it is non-numerical.
        e.Handled = true;
    }
}

Upvotes: 2

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