How to: Customize the Appearance of Cells in the Windows Forms DataGridView Control
You can customize the appearance of any cell by handling the DataGridView control's CellPainting event. You can extract the DataGridView control's Graphics from the Graphics property of the DataGridViewCellPaintingEventArgs. With this Graphics, you can affect the appearance of the entire DataGridView control, but you will usually want to affect only the appearance of the cell that is currently being painted. The ClipBounds property of the DataGridViewCellPaintingEventArgs enables you to restrict your painting operations to the cell that is currently being painted.
In the following code example, you will paint all the cells in a ContactName
column using the DataGridView control's color scheme. Each cell's text content is painted in Crimson, and an inset rectangle is drawn in the same color as the DataGridView control's GridColor property.
Example
private void dataGridView1_CellPainting(object sender,
System.Windows.Forms.DataGridViewCellPaintingEventArgs e)
{
if (this.dataGridView1.Columns["ContactName"].Index ==
e.ColumnIndex && e.RowIndex >= 0)
{
Rectangle newRect = new Rectangle(e.CellBounds.X + 1,
e.CellBounds.Y + 1, e.CellBounds.Width - 4,
e.CellBounds.Height - 4);
using (
Brush gridBrush = new SolidBrush(this.dataGridView1.GridColor),
backColorBrush = new SolidBrush(e.CellStyle.BackColor))
{
using (Pen gridLinePen = new Pen(gridBrush))
{
// Erase the cell.
e.Graphics.FillRectangle(backColorBrush, e.CellBounds);
// Draw the grid lines (only the right and bottom lines;
// DataGridView takes care of the others).
e.Graphics.DrawLine(gridLinePen, e.CellBounds.Left,
e.CellBounds.Bottom - 1, e.CellBounds.Right - 1,
e.CellBounds.Bottom - 1);
e.Graphics.DrawLine(gridLinePen, e.CellBounds.Right - 1,
e.CellBounds.Top, e.CellBounds.Right - 1,
e.CellBounds.Bottom);
// Draw the inset highlight box.
e.Graphics.DrawRectangle(Pens.Blue, newRect);
// Draw the text content of the cell, ignoring alignment.
if (e.Value != null)
{
e.Graphics.DrawString((String)e.Value, e.CellStyle.Font,
Brushes.Crimson, e.CellBounds.X + 2,
e.CellBounds.Y + 2, StringFormat.GenericDefault);
}
e.Handled = true;
}
}
}
}
Private Sub dataGridView1_CellPainting(ByVal sender As Object, _
ByVal e As System.Windows.Forms.DataGridViewCellPaintingEventArgs) _
Handles dataGridView1.CellPainting
If Me.dataGridView1.Columns("ContactName").Index = _
e.ColumnIndex AndAlso e.RowIndex >= 0 Then
Dim newRect As New Rectangle(e.CellBounds.X + 1, e.CellBounds.Y + 1, _
e.CellBounds.Width - 4, e.CellBounds.Height - 4)
Dim backColorBrush As New SolidBrush(e.CellStyle.BackColor)
Dim gridBrush As New SolidBrush(Me.dataGridView1.GridColor)
Dim gridLinePen As New Pen(gridBrush)
Try
' Erase the cell.
e.Graphics.FillRectangle(backColorBrush, e.CellBounds)
' Draw the grid lines (only the right and bottom lines;
' DataGridView takes care of the others).
e.Graphics.DrawLine(gridLinePen, e.CellBounds.Left, _
e.CellBounds.Bottom - 1, e.CellBounds.Right - 1, _
e.CellBounds.Bottom - 1)
e.Graphics.DrawLine(gridLinePen, e.CellBounds.Right - 1, _
e.CellBounds.Top, e.CellBounds.Right - 1, _
e.CellBounds.Bottom)
' Draw the inset highlight box.
e.Graphics.DrawRectangle(Pens.Blue, newRect)
' Draw the text content of the cell, ignoring alignment.
If (e.Value IsNot Nothing) Then
e.Graphics.DrawString(CStr(e.Value), e.CellStyle.Font, _
Brushes.Crimson, e.CellBounds.X + 2, e.CellBounds.Y + 2, _
StringFormat.GenericDefault)
End If
e.Handled = True
Finally
gridLinePen.Dispose()
gridBrush.Dispose()
backColorBrush.Dispose()
End Try
End If
End Sub
Compiling the Code
This example requires:
A DataGridView control named
dataGridView1
with aContactName
column such as the one in the Customers table in the Northwind sample database.References to the System, System.Windows.Forms, and System.Drawing assemblies.
See also
.NET Desktop feedback