I am developing a very rudimentary drawing program: A 2D grid comprised of multiple RectangleShapes, around 20×30 pixels each, which when clicked change color based on user RGB input, which works just fine:
Color SelectedColor = new Color();
private void Pixel_1_1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e) // on Rectangle click
{
Pixel_1_1.FillColor = SelectedColor; // change to currently desired color.
}
Since the number of squares is rising dramatically, I’m looking for a way to arrange the “pixel” rectangles into a 2D array. (I really don’t want to have to make a Pixel_Click method for every single Rectangle on the screen!) Hoping eventually to be able to call something like:
private void Pixel_[x]_[y]_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
Pixel_[x]_[y].FillColor = SelectedColor;
}
My friends suggest the use of an anonymous delegate, but I don’t understand how to fully use one to solve my problem.
What would be the best way to generate a 2D array of rectangles in a C# Windows Form? And once generated, how can I access them with a single method for variant values of x and y?
While you are probably correct in thinking of each rectangle as an object, it probably isn’t correct to think of each rectangle as a windows control, especially since you have so many of them.
So try creating your own rectangle object:
Now you just need to keep a list of your objects and paint on a single Panel control (or PictureBox) all of your rectangles:
To handle the “click” event of the rectangles, you just handle the
MouseDownorMouseClickevent of your container control and determine yourself which rectangle is being clicked on: