来源:codeproject 作者:David R Lewis
Introduction
During a recent project, I was asked to make the DataGrid behave like an Excel
freeze pane. That’s right; freeze the header row and freeze the left column of
a DataGrid. After several hours of searching for someone that has done this and
posted the code, I gave up and tried to figure out a solution myself. The
project source code above provides three ASPX files. One to lock the column(s) from the client side, one to lock the column (s) from
the server side, and one to lock the column from the server side and then
unlock/lock the column from the client side.
Background
The plan is actually fairly simple. While browsing the net for a solution, I
found a great article on how to create a freeze pane from an HTML table. The
solution is CSS based and only works with Internet Explorer, but does degrade
well in other browsers. I would like to thank Brett Merkey for providing this
solution. His ‘Lock or Freeze Columns with Non-scroll headers’ provided me
with the idea and can be viewed here.
The solution is fairly simple, and in the end, you will have two different
ways to lock the DataGrid columns.
Here is a synopsis of what we will be doing to create the freeze pane effect:
Creating a simple DataGrid with data surrounded by a <div> tag.
Modifying the DataGrid to render <th> tags inside the header row.
Creating a style sheet that will lock the DataGrid header row and column(s).
Locking the column(s) from the client side.
Locking the column(s) for the server side.
Using the code
Modifying the DataGrid to render <th> tags
The first problem that we run into is that the DataGrid does not render
the <th> element but rather the common <td> element in the header. Luckily for us,
Microsoft put out a rather obscure hotfix for this. Most of us have already
downloaded this hotfix without knowing it. You can view more information (or
download it if you have not done so yet) here.
Among other things, this hotfix adds the property UseAccessibleHeader to the
DataGrid. This property, when set to true, ‘renders DataGrid table headers in
<th> tags with a scope="col" attribute.’
The finished DataGrid code will look something like this:
<asp:DataGrid id="DataGrid1" runat="server" CssClass="Grid" UseAccessibleHeader="True">
<AlternatingItemStyle CssClass="GridAltRow"></AlternatingItemStyle>
<ItemStyle CssClass="GridRow"></ItemStyle>
<Columns>
<asp:BoundColumn DataField="Name" HeaderText="Name"
ItemStyle-Wrap="False"></asp:BoundColumn>
<asp:BoundColumn DataField="Address" HeaderText="Address"
ItemStyle-Wrap="False"></asp:BoundColumn>
<asp:BoundColumn DataField="City" HeaderText="City"
ItemStyle-Wrap="False"></asp:BoundColumn>
<asp:BoundColumn DataField="State" HeaderText="State"
ItemStyle-Wrap="False"></asp:BoundColumn>
<asp:BoundColumn DataField="Zip" HeaderText="Zip"
ItemStyle-Wrap="False"></asp:BoundColumn>
<asp:BoundColumn DataField="Random Babble"
HeaderText="Random Babble"
ItemStyle-Wrap="False"></asp:BoundColumn>
</Columns>
</asp:DataGrid>
</div>
Creating the style sheet
The style sheet is the key to this project. There are two things that need
to be noted. First, CSS expressions are used. CSS expressions were
introduced in Internet Explorer 5.0, and it allows you to assign a JavaScript
expression to a CSS property. In this case, we are setting the horizontal
and vertical scrolling position of the document elements by using expressions.
Second, there is a certain order in which the styles need to be set. If you
change the order of the styles listed below, you will come up with some rather
odd results. And in case you’re wondering… yes I went through almost every
incorrect order before actually coming up with an order that works.
Here is the CSS code:
div#div-datagrid {
width: 420px;
height: 200px;
overflow: auto;
scrollbar-base-color:#ffeaff;
}
/* Locks the left column */
td.locked, th.locked {
font-size: 14px;
font-weight: bold;
text-align: center;
background-color: navy;
color: white;
border-right: 1px solid silver;
position:relative;
cursor: default;
/*IE5+ only*/
left: expression(document.getElementById("div-datagrid").scrollLeft-2);
}
/* Locks table header */
th {
font-size: 14px;
font-weight: bold;
text-align: center;
background-color: navy;
color: white;
border-right: 1px solid silver;
position:relative;
cursor: default;
/*IE5+ only*/
top: expression(document.getElementById("div-datagrid").scrollTop-2);
z-index: 10;
}
/* Keeps the header as the top most item. Important for top left item*/
th.locked {z-index: 99;}
/* DataGrid Item and AlternatingItem Style*/
.GridRow {font-size: 10pt; color: black; font-family: Arial;
background-color:#ffffff; height:35px;}
.GridAltRow {font-size: 10pt; color: black; font-family: Arial;
background-color:#eeeeee; height:35px;}
Locking the column(s) from the client side
In order to lock the column from the client side, we just need to create a
script that changes the style of the first column to ‘locked’. Multiple
columns can be frozen just by modifying the code below. The following
script is added to the head of the ASPX file to lock the first column.
function lockCol(tblID)
{
var table = document.getElementById(tblID);
var button = document.getElementById(’toggle’);
var cTR = table.getElementsByTagName(’tr’); //collection of rows
if (table.rows[0].cells[0].className == ’’)
{
for (i = 0; i < cTR.length; i++)
{
var tr = cTR.item(i);
tr.cells[0].className = ’locked’
}
button.innerText = "Unlock First Column";
}
else
{
for (i = 0; i < cTR.length; i++)
{
var tr = cTR.item(i);
tr.cells[0].className = ’’
}
button.innerText = "Lock First Column";
}
}
</script>
Locking the column(s) from the server side
Again, in order to lock the column from the server side, we just need
to change the style of the first column to ‘locked’. In order to
implement this, we use the ItemDataBound method of the DataGrid.
The following code sets the style of the first column to ‘locked’.
This is actually extremely simple with the code below:
Handles DataGrid1.ItemDataBound
e.Item.Cells(0).CssClass = "locked"
End Sub
And to freeze the first two columns, it’s just as easy:
Handles DataGrid1.ItemDataBound
e.Item.Cells(0).CssClass = "locked"
e.Item.Cells(1).CssClass = "locked"
End Sub
另外单独固定表头,不固定列还有个简单的办法
把所有datagrid表格的Header做成类似Excel表格,当table中数据很多的时候,我们可以下拉滚动条,还能保持header固定。在网上搜索后找到了如下比较简单的方法。具体应用如下:
1. 在CSS 中添加一个Class
font-size: 9pt;
vertical-align: middle;
text-transform: capitalize;
font-family: "Arial" , "Helvetica" , "sans-serif";
height: 25px;
background-color: #ecf4fe;
text-align: center;
text-decoration: none;
POSITION: relative; --必要的
TOP: expression(this.offsetParent.scrollTop) --必要的
}
在页面上,类似代码如:
<asp:DataGrid id=grdCurRateVoy runat="server" Width="100%" Visible="True">
<ItemStyle CssClass="ItemStyle"></ItemStyle>
<HeaderStyle CssClass="fixHeaderStyle"></HeaderStyle>
<PagerStyle CssClass="PagerStyle"></PagerStyle>
</asp:DataGrid>
</DIV>