How to bind a List to a ComboBox?

Solution 1:

As you are referring to a combobox, I'm assuming you don't want to use 2-way databinding (if so, look at using a BindingList)

public class Country
{
    public string Name { get; set; }
    public IList<City> Cities { get; set; }
    public Country(string _name)
    {
        Cities = new List<City>();
        Name = _name;
    }
}



List<Country> countries = new List<Country> { new Country("UK"), 
                                     new Country("Australia"), 
                                     new Country("France") };

var bindingSource1 = new BindingSource();
bindingSource1.DataSource = countries;

comboBox1.DataSource = bindingSource1.DataSource;

comboBox1.DisplayMember = "Name";
comboBox1.ValueMember = "Name";

To find the country selected in the bound combobox, you would do something like: Country country = (Country)comboBox1.SelectedItem;.

If you want the ComboBox to dynamically update you'll need to make sure that the data structure that you have set as the DataSource implements IBindingList; one such structure is BindingList<T>.


Tip: make sure that you are binding the DisplayMember to a Property on the class and not a public field. If you class uses public string Name { get; set; } it will work but if it uses public string Name; it will not be able to access the value and instead will display the object type for each line in the combo box.

Solution 2:

For a backgrounder, there are 2 ways to use a ComboBox/ListBox

1) Add Country Objects to the Items property and retrieve a Country as Selecteditem. To use this you should override the ToString of Country.

2) Use DataBinding, set the DataSource to a IList (List<>) and use DisplayMember, ValueMember and SelectedValue

For 2) you will need a list of countries first

// not tested, schematic:
List<Country> countries = ...;
...; // fill 

comboBox1.DataSource = countries;
comboBox1.DisplayMember="Name";
comboBox1.ValueMember="Cities";

And then in the SelectionChanged,

if (comboBox1.Selecteditem != null)
{
   comboBox2.DataSource=comboBox1.SelectedValue;

}

Solution 3:

public MainWindow(){
    List<person> personList = new List<person>();

    personList.Add(new person { name = "rob", age = 32 } );
    personList.Add(new person { name = "annie", age = 24 } );
    personList.Add(new person { name = "paul", age = 19 } );

    comboBox1.DataSource = personList;
    comboBox1.DisplayMember = "name";

    comboBox1.SelectionChanged += new SelectionChangedEventHandler(comboBox1_SelectionChanged);
}


void comboBox1_SelectionChanged(object sender, SelectionChangedEventArgs e)
{
    person selectedPerson = comboBox1.SelectedItem as person;
    messageBox.Show(selectedPerson.name, "caption goes here");
}

boom.