5

I need to create and copy to the clipboard some RichText with standard "formatting" like bold/italics, indents and the like. The way I'm doing it now seems kind of inelegant... I'm creating a RichTextBox item and applying my formatting through that like so:

RichTextBox rtb = new RichTextBox();
Font boldfont = new Font("Times New Roman", 10, FontStyle.Bold);
rtb.Text = "sometext";
rtb.SelectAll()
rtb.SelectionFont = boldfont;
rtb.SelectionIndent = 12;

There has got to be a better way, but after a few hours of searching I was unable to come up with anything better. Any ideas?

Edit: The RichTextBox (rtb) is not displayed/drawn anywhere on a form. I'm just using the object to format my RichText.

BKimmel
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6 Answers6

3

You may want to suspend the layout of the richtextbox before you do all of that, to avoid unecessary flicker. That's one of the common mistakes I used to make which made it seem "inelegant"

hova
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    Well that's the thing; The RichTextBox isn't even *displayed* anywhere...I'm just using it because I couldn't find an equally facile way to manipulate/format RichText. Thanks for your suggestion. – BKimmel Sep 25 '08 at 21:13
  • Well, I suppose you could create a whole class structure and methods and whatnot for directly manipulating rich text, and then you could post that code online so others could use it. A google search for rich text libraries turns up nothing? – hova Sep 25 '08 at 21:36
3

I think your technique is a great way to accomplish what you're looking to do. I know what you mean...it feels kind of "dirty" because you're using a Winforms control for something other than it was intended for, but it just works. I've used this technique for years. Interested to see if anyone else has viable options.

jwalkerjr
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  • Agreed. It's no different from creating a WebBrowser control just to parse a page and get the text out or something, which I've done before. Nothing wrong with using tools for new purposes. – Ryan Lundy Sep 25 '08 at 21:40
  • Ya, that's exactly what I'm trying to say...it just feels wrong...If there is no equally facile way to go about it I am fine...I would much rather do this than mess around trying to format strings into RTF manually...I just thought there must be something out there that I'm missing. – BKimmel Sep 25 '08 at 22:48
3

Is this project helpful?

http://www.codeproject.com/KB/string/nrtftree.aspx

jjxtra
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2

You could create some utility extension methods to make it more 'elegant' :)

public static RichTextBox Set(this RichTextBox rtb, Font font, string text)
{               
    rtb.Text = text;
    rtb.SelectAll();
    rtb.SelectionFont = font;
    rtb.SelectionIndent = 12;
    return rtb;
}

And call like this:

someRtb.Set(yourFont, "The Text").AndThenYouCanAddMoreAndCHainThem();

Edit: I see now that you are not even displaying it. Hrm, interesting, sorry i wasnt of much help with providing a Non Rtb way.

Jeff B
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mattlant
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1

You should also suspend the layout of the richtextbox just after creation and dispose it after use.

RichTextBox rtb = new RichTextBox();
rtb.SuspendLayout();
//richtext processing goes here...
rtb.Dispose();

And don't be shy to use richtextbox for richtext processing. Microsoft itself is doing this here in this tutorial. :-)

ePandit
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0

I know it's been a while, but check out this stackoverflow post on converting rtf to html. It would probably be way easier to get your stuff into html, manipulate it, then either display it using html or convert it back to rtf.

Convert Rtf to HTML

Community
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jjxtra
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