FilterEditorControl.QueryCustomFunctions Event
Allows you to add custom-function-based filters (for example, ‘discount is more than 15%’) to Excel-style pop-up filter menus and/or the filter editor.
Namespace: DevExpress.DataAccess.UI
Assembly: DevExpress.DataAccess.v24.1.UI.dll
NuGet Package: DevExpress.DataAccess.UI
Declaration
Event Data
The QueryCustomFunctions event's data class is DevExpress.XtraEditors.Filtering.CustomFunctionEventArgs.
Remarks
To create a custom filter function (for example, ‘discount is more than 15%’), and add this function to Excel-style pop-up filter menus and/or the filter editor, do the following:
- implement a custom function
- register the function
- add the function to pop-up filter menus and the filter editor in a QueryCustomFunctions event handler
Example
The example below shows how to add the Black Friday Discount filter to a grid view.
using DevExpress.Data.Filtering;
IsBlackFridayDiscountFunction.Register();
gridView1.QueryCustomFunctions += OnQueryCustomFunctions;
void OnQueryCustomFunctions(object sender, CustomFunctionEventArgs e) {
if(e.PropertyName == "Discount")
e.Add(IsBlackFridayDiscountFunction.FunctionName);
}
public class IsBlackFridayDiscountFunction : ICustomFunctionDisplayAttributes {
public const string FunctionName = "IsBlackFridayDiscount";
static readonly IsBlackFridayDiscountFunction Instance = new IsBlackFridayDiscountFunction();
IsBlackFridayDiscountFunction() { }
public static void Register() {
CriteriaOperator.RegisterCustomFunction(Instance);
}
public static bool Unregister() {
return CriteriaOperator.UnregisterCustomFunction(Instance);
}
#region ICustomFunctionOperatorBrowsable Members
public FunctionCategory Category {
get { return FunctionCategory.Math; }
}
public string Description {
get { return "The discount amount is 15% or more."; }
}
public bool IsValidOperandCount(int count) {
return count == 1;
}
public bool IsValidOperandType(int operandIndex, int operandCount, Type type) {
return DevExpress.Data.Summary.SummaryItemTypeHelper.IsNumericalType(type);
}
public int MaxOperandCount {
get { return 1; }
}
public int MinOperandCount {
get { return 1; }
}
#endregion
#region ICustomFunctionDisplayAttributes
public string DisplayName {
get { return "Is Black Friday Discount"; }
}
public object Image {
get { return "bo_price"; }
}
#endregion
#region ICustomFunctionOperator Members
public object Evaluate(params object[] operands) {
double discount = Convert.ToDouble(operands[0]);
return discount >= 0.15;
}
public string Name {
get { return FunctionName; }
}
public Type ResultType(params Type[] operands) {
return typeof(bool);
}
#endregion
}
Tip
Run the following demo and click Open Solution for the complete example: XtraGrid.
In the case of a Code First data source, you can annotate data fields with the CustomFunction
attribute.
[CustomFunction(IsBlackFridayDiscountFunction.FunctionName)]
public double Discount { get; set; }
Tip
To add custom functions to filter menus, filter editors, and conditional formatting dialogs of all DevExpress controls in the application, use the static (Shared in VB) QueryCustomFunctions event.