ProgressBar in C# 6

This article is based on the original article that was previously written using Visual Studio 2010. You can find the original article on the below link:A ProgressBar control is used to represent the progress of a lengthy operation that takes time where a user must wait for the operation to be finished.

Creating a ProgressBar

We can create a ProgressBar control using a Forms designer at design-time or using the ProgressBar class in code at run-time.

Design-time

To create a ProgressBar control at design time, you simply drag a ProgressBar control from the Toolbox and drop onto a Form in Visual Studio. After you the drag and drop, a ProgressBar is created on the Form; for example the ProgressBar1 is added to the form and looks as in Figure 1.

1

Run-time

Creating a ProgressBar control at run time is merely a work of creating an instance of the ProgressBar class, set its properties and add the ProgressBar class to the Form controls.

The first step to create a dynamic ProgressBar is to create an instance of the ProgressBar class. The following code snippet creates a ProgressBar control object:

C# Code:
  1. ProgressBar pBar = new ProgressBar();
In the next step, you may set the properties of the ProgressBar control. The following code snippet sets the Location, Name, Width, and Height properties of a ProgressBar.

C# Code:
  1. pBar.Location = new System.Drawing.Point(20, 20);
  2. pBar.Name = "progressBar1";
  3. pBar.Width = 200;
  4. pBar.Height = 30;
Once the ProgressBar control is ready with its properties, the next step is to add the ProgressBar to a Form. To do so, we need to add the ProgressBar control to the form using the Controls.Add method as in the following.

C# Code:
  1. Controls.Add(pBar);
Setting ProgressBar Properties

After you place a ProgressBar control on a Form, the next step is to set the properties.

The easiest way to set the properties is from the Properties Window. You can open the Properties window by pressing F4 or right-clicking on a control and selecting the "Properties" menu item. The Properties window looks as in Figure 2.

2

Name


The Name property represents a unique name of a ProgressBar control. It is used to access the control in the code. The following code snippet sets and gets the name and text of a ProgressBar control.

C# Code:

  1. PBar.Name = "ProgresBar1";
Positioning a ProgressBar

We can use the Location property to position a control. We can also dock a control using the Dock property.

Note: A ProgressBar can only be positioned horizontally.

The Dock property is used to set the position of a ProgressBar. It is of the type DockStyle that can have values Top, Bottom, Left, Right, and Fill. The following code snippet sets the Location, Width, and Height properties of a ProgressBar control.

C# Code:

  1. pBar.Dock = DockStyle.Bottom;
Minimum, Maximum, and Value

The Minimum and Maximum properties define the range of a ProgressBar. The Value property represents the current value of a ProgressBar. The current value of the ProgressBar for the minimum value is the color green to show the progress of the control. We can also use the Value property to show the progress of an operation.

C# Code:
  1. pBar.Minimum = 0;
  2. pBar.Maximum = 100;
  3. pBar.Value = 70;
A ProgressBar with a value looks as in Figure 3.

3


RightToLeftLayout and MarqueeAnimationSpeed

The default progress of a ProgressBar is from left to right. But the ProgressBar control can also show the progress from right to left by setting RightToLeftLayout to true. The MarqueeAnimationSpeed property represents the time period, in milliseconds, that it takes the progress block to scroll across the progress bar.

Summary

Here, we discussed how to create menus using the ProgressBar control. First we discussed how to create menus at design-time and run-time. After that we saw how to set menu properties and click event handlers.

To read other articles on the Progress Bar, please click on the below references link:


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