I have a Panel In my C# form and I have a button. When I click on the Button the invisible Panel Shows. Instead of that I want the Panel to move in or slide in. For example when you click on a combobox the dropdown list doesnt just pop in. I want my Panel to appear like that. How can I do that ?
问题:
回答1:
Window animation is a built-in feature for Windows. Here's a class that uses it:
using System;
using System.ComponentModel;
using System.Windows.Forms;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
public static class Util {
public enum Effect { Roll, Slide, Center, Blend }
public static void Animate(Control ctl, Effect effect, int msec, int angle) {
int flags = effmap[(int)effect];
if (ctl.Visible) { flags |= 0x10000; angle += 180; }
else {
if (ctl.TopLevelControl == ctl) flags |= 0x20000;
else if (effect == Effect.Blend) throw new ArgumentException();
}
flags |= dirmap[(angle % 360) / 45];
bool ok = AnimateWindow(ctl.Handle, msec, flags);
if (!ok) throw new Exception("Animation failed");
ctl.Visible = !ctl.Visible;
}
private static int[] dirmap = { 1, 5, 4, 6, 2, 10, 8, 9 };
private static int[] effmap = { 0, 0x40000, 0x10, 0x80000 };
[DllImport("user32.dll")]
private static extern bool AnimateWindow(IntPtr handle, int msec, int flags);
}
Sample usage:
private void button2_Click(object sender, EventArgs e) {
Util.Animate(button1, Util.Effect.Slide, 150, 180);
}
回答2:
If you are using .NET 4 (if not replace Task with Thread), a function similar to this could be a start:
private void slideToDestination(Control destination, Control control, int delay, Action onFinish)
{
new Task(() =>
{
int directionX = destination.Left > control.Left ? 1 : -1;
int directionY = destination.Bottom > control.Top ? 1 : -1;
while (control.Left != destination.Left || control.Top != destination.Bottom)
{
try
{
if (control.Left != destination.Left)
{
this.Invoke((Action)delegate()
{
control.Left += directionX;
});
}
if (control.Top != destination.Bottom)
{
this.Invoke((Action)delegate()
{
control.Top += directionY;
});
}
Thread.Sleep(delay);
}
catch
{
// form could be disposed
break;
}
}
if (onFinish != null) onFinish();
}).Start();
}
Usage:
slideToDestination(sender as Control, panel1, 10, () => MessageBox.Show("Done!"));
slideToDestination(sender as Control, panel1, 0, null);
As action you would send some boolean variable to set to true so that you know that the animation has finished or some code to run after it. Beware of deadlocks when calling with a null action. You could run two animations on the same control in two different directions with the same speed, and it will stay where it was forever and of course two animations simultaneusly can make the control go infinitely in some direction because the while will never finish :)
回答3:
Check out the library I wrote last year:
WinForm Animation Library [.Net3.5+]
A simple library for animating controls/values in .Net WinForm (.Net 3.5 and later). Key frame (Path) based and fully customizable.
https://falahati.github.io/WinFormAnimation/
new Animator2D(
new Path2D(new Float2D(-100, -100), c_control.Location.ToFloat2D(), 500))
.Play(c_control, Animator2D.KnownProperties.Location);
This moves the c_control
control from -100, -100 to the location it was in first place in 500 ms.
回答4:
For WinForms, you could start with the Panel location being off screen.
Employ a Timer, and in the Tick event, shift the Panel's location slowly into view until it is at your predefined coordinates.
Lots of ways to skin a cat, but this is how I'd do it.