Xceed Toolkit Plus for WPF v4.6 Documentation
DoubleUpDown Class
Members  Example 


Xceed.Wpf.Toolkit Assembly > Xceed.Wpf.Toolkit Namespace : DoubleUpDown Class
Represents a textbox with button spinners that allow incrementing and decrementing double values by using the spinner buttons, keyboard up/down arrows, or mouse wheel.
Syntax
'Declaration
 
<TemplatePartAttribute(Name="PART_TextBox", Type=System.Windows.Controls.TextBox)>

<StyleTypedPropertyAttribute(Property="FocusVisualStyle", StyleTargetType=System.Windows.Controls.Control)>

<XmlLangPropertyAttribute("Language")>

<UsableDuringInitializationAttribute(True)>

<RuntimeNamePropertyAttribute("Name")>

<UidPropertyAttribute("Uid")>

<TypeDescriptionProviderAttribute(MS.Internal.ComponentModel.DependencyObjectProvider)>

<NameScopePropertyAttribute("NameScope", System.Windows.NameScope)>

Public Class DoubleUpDown 

   Inherits Xceed.Wpf.Toolkit.CommonNumericUpDown(Of Double)

   Implements Xceed.Wpf.Toolkit.Core.Input.IValidateInput 
'Usage
 
Dim instance As DoubleUpDown
[TemplatePart(Name="PART_TextBox", Type=System.Windows.Controls.TextBox)]

[StyleTypedProperty(Property="FocusVisualStyle", StyleTargetType=System.Windows.Controls.Control)]

[XmlLangProperty("Language")]

[UsableDuringInitialization(true)]

[RuntimeNameProperty("Name")]

[UidProperty("Uid")]

[TypeDescriptionProvider(MS.Internal.ComponentModel.DependencyObjectProvider)]

[NameScopeProperty("NameScope", System.Windows.NameScope)]

public class DoubleUpDown : Xceed.Wpf.Toolkit.CommonNumericUpDown<double>, Xceed.Wpf.Toolkit.Core.Input.IValidateInput  
Remarks
When using the DecimalUpDown in data-binding scenarios, bind your object's value to the Value property. You can specify how much to increment the value by setting the Increment property. You can control the minimum and maximum allowed values by setting the Minimum and the Maximum properties. You can also specify whether the user can directly edit the values in the text box by setting the IsReadOnly property. If you would like to get the actual formatted string representation of the value, you can use the Text property.
Example
The following shows how to create a DoubleUpDown, setting the FormatString, Value, Increment, Maximimum, and Minimum values.
<xctk:DoubleUpDown FormatString="F3" Value="1564.6749586" Increment=".001"  Maximum="200000.599" />
Inheritance Hierarchy

System.Object
   System.Windows.Threading.DispatcherObject
      System.Windows.DependencyObject
         System.Windows.Media.Visual
            System.Windows.UIElement
               System.Windows.FrameworkElement
                  System.Windows.Controls.Control
                     Xceed.Wpf.Toolkit.Primitives.InputBase
                        Xceed.Wpf.Toolkit.Primitives.UpDownBase<T>
                           Xceed.Wpf.Toolkit.NumericUpDown<T>
                              Xceed.Wpf.Toolkit.CommonNumericUpDown<T>
                                 Xceed.Wpf.Toolkit.DoubleUpDown
                                    Xceed.Wpf.Toolkit.PropertyGrid.Editors.PropertyGridEditorDoubleUpDown

Requirements

See Also

Reference

DoubleUpDown Members
Xceed.Wpf.Toolkit Namespace