Skip to content

Replies

0
Nicholas Parr
Nicholas Parr answered on Nov 17, 2020 8:46 PM

I followed the steps you suggested and was unable to reproduce the behavior you’re describing.  Specifically, in my sample the cells within the disabled row do get checked.

I have attached the sample project I used to test this.  Please test this project on your PC; whether or not it works correctly may help indicate the nature of this problem.

If the project does not work correctly, this indicates either a problem possibly specific to your environment, or a difference in the DLL versions we are using.  My test was performed using winforms 20.1.114

If the project does show the product feature working correctly, this indicates a possible problem in the code of your application.  It will help if you can provide a small, isolated sample application that demonstrates the behavior you are seeing.

Or, if this sample project is not an accurate demonstration of what you’re trying to do, please feel free to modify it and send it back or send a small sample project of your own if you have one.

Please let me know if I can provide any further assistance.

 

0
Nicholas Parr
Nicholas Parr answered on May 6, 2020 6:25 PM

The onCellEdit event has oldvalue and new value properties which you can use to determine when a grid is no longer clean since the value will have changed and so fired the event.

Sample code:

public handleCellEdit(event: IGridEditEventArgs) {
        console.log("old value " + event.oldValue + " new value " + event.newValue);
}

Documentation links:

onCellEdit            properties

0
Nicholas Parr
Nicholas Parr answered on May 5, 2020 8:13 PM

Hello Shobhana,

In order to better assist you I would appreciate some clarification on what you mean by the grid being clean vs dirty.  For example, does filtering or sorting the grid count as making the grid dirty?