BaseView.BorderStyle Property
Gets or sets the border style for the current View.
Namespace: DevExpress.XtraGrid.Views.Base
Assembly: DevExpress.XtraGrid.v18.2.dll
Declaration
[DefaultValue(BorderStyles.Default)]
[XtraSerializableProperty]
[DXCategory("Appearance")]
public BorderStyles BorderStyle { get; set; }
Property Value
Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|
BorderStyles | **Default** | A BorderStyles enumeration value specifying the border style of a View. |
Available values:
Name | Description |
---|---|
NoBorder | There are no borders. The image below demonstrates the NoBorder style applied to the ButtonEdit control. |
Simple | Borders are flat. The image below demonstrates the Simple style applied to the ButtonEdit control. |
Flat | Borders are flat. The image below demonstrates the Flat style applied to the ButtonEdit control. |
HotFlat | Borders are flat. Borders and the client area are highlighted when the mouse pointer is positioned over them. The image below demonstrates the HotFlat style applied to the ButtonEdit control. |
UltraFlat | Borders have an Office XP style. Borders and the client area are highlighted when the mouse pointer is positioned over them or they are focused. Otherwise, there are no borders. The image below demonstrates the UltraFlat style applied to the ButtonEdit control. |
Style3D | Borders are three-dimensional. The image below demonstrates the Style3D style applied to the ButtonEdit control. |
Office2003 | Borders have an Office 2003 style. The image below demonstrates the Office2003 style applied to a ButtonEdit control. |
Default | The border style is determined by the current Look-and-Feel settings. For example, text editors’ borders are painted according to the RepositoryItem.LookAndFeel object’s settings. |
Remarks
This property specifies the border style for the current View. If the BaseView.BorderStyle
property value is set to BorderStyles.Default, the border’s appearance is controlled by the GridControl.LookAndFeel property.
To specify the visual settings of other visual elements within your view, use the BaseView.PaintStyleName property.