I have a multiple forms in my project. Form1 contains a pictureBox that displays a jpeg. In Form2 I have a trackBar that I would like to control the zoom level of the image
1) Pass a form1 reference into form2's constructor:
Form2 dataWindow = new Form2(this);
dataWindow.Show();
...
private form1 as Form1;
public Form2(Form1 frm1)
{
form1 = frm1;
}
Then in Form2s TrackBar_Scroll event reference the PictureBox via the private member variable form1: form1.PictureBox1.Property
2) Magnify your pictures using a PictureBox so that you can zoom with the Mouse Wheel
The better way is events:
public partial class Form1 : Form
{
public Form1()
{
InitializeComponent();
}
private void button1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
var form2 = new Form2();
form2.TrackBarMoved += new Action<int>(ZoomPictureBox);
form2.ShowDialog();
form2.TrackBarMoved -= new Action<int>(ZoomPictureBox);
}
private void ZoomPictureBox(int zoomFactor)
{
pictureBox1.Width = 100 * zoomFactor;
pictureBox1.Height = 100 * zoomFactor;
}
}
public partial class Form2 : Form
{
public Form2()
{
InitializeComponent();
}
public event Action<int> TrackBarMoved;
private void trackBar1_Scroll(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
TrackBarMoved(trackBar1.Value);
}
}
It's considered bad design to allow other classes to modify the internal controls of the form. The form should be responsible for all of it's components. You shouldn't ever make any of the internal controls public. It's also considered bad practice for a child form to have a reference to the parent form.
The appropriate way to approach this problem is through events. The child form, Form2
, should define a public event:
public event Action<int> TrackBarMoved;
Form2
can fire that event when the track bar is moved and pass, as the parameter, the position of the trackbar (if it makes sense to pass something else, such as the zoom level, or whatever else you want, that's fine too).
Form1
can the subscribe to that event when it creates From2
and change the zoom on the picture (internally, from within Form1
) based on what the trackbar position is.