Note
Access to this page requires authorization. You can try signing in or changing directories.
Access to this page requires authorization. You can try changing directories.
This example demonstrates some of the more common operations that can be performed on a table's columns through the Columns property.
Example
The following example creates a new table and then uses the Add method to add columns to the table's Columns collection.
Table tbl = new Table();
int columnsToAdd = 4;
for (int x = 0; x < columnsToAdd; x++)
tbl.Columns.Add(new TableColumn());
The following example inserts a new TableColumn. The new column is inserted at index position 0, making it the new first column in the table.
Note
The TableColumnCollection collection uses standard zero-based indexing.
tbl.Columns.Insert(0, new TableColumn());
The following example accesses some arbitrary properties on columns in the TableColumnCollection collection, referring to particular columns by index.
tbl.Columns[0].Width = new GridLength(20);
tbl.Columns[1].Background = Brushes.AliceBlue;
tbl.Columns[2].Width = new GridLength(20);
tbl.Columns[3].Background = Brushes.AliceBlue;
The following example gets the number of columns currently hosted by the table.
int columns = tbl.Columns.Count;
The following example removes a particular column by reference.
tbl.Columns.Remove(tbl.Columns[3]);
The following example removes a particular column by index.
tbl.Columns.RemoveAt(2);
The following example removes all columns from the table's columns collection.
tbl.Columns.Clear();
See Also
Tasks
How to: Define a Table with XAML
How to: Build a Table Programmatically
How to: Manipulate a Table's Row Groups through the RowGroups Property
How to: Manipulate a FlowDocument through the Blocks Property
How to: Manipulate a Table's Row Groups through the RowGroups Property