ControlExtensions.AddDomainUpDown Method (ControlCollection, Single, Single, Single, Single, String)

Adds a new DomainUpDown control to the document in the specified size and location.

Namespace:  Microsoft.Office.Tools.Word
Assembly:  Microsoft.Office.Tools.Word.v4.0.Utilities (in Microsoft.Office.Tools.Word.v4.0.Utilities.dll)

Syntax

'Declaration
<ExtensionAttribute> _
Public Shared Function AddDomainUpDown ( _
    controls As ControlCollection, _
    left As Single, _
    top As Single, _
    width As Single, _
    height As Single, _
    name As String _
) As DomainUpDown
public static DomainUpDown AddDomainUpDown(
    this ControlCollection controls,
    float left,
    float top,
    float width,
    float height,
    string name
)

Parameters

  • left
    Type: System.Single
    The distance in points between the left edge of the control and the left edge of the document.
  • top
    Type: System.Single
    The distance in points between the top edge of the control and the top edge of the document.
  • height
    Type: System.Single
    The height of the control in points.

Return Value

Type: Microsoft.Office.Tools.Word.Controls.DomainUpDown
The control that was added to the document.

Usage Note

In Visual Basic and C#, you can call this method as an instance method on any object of type ControlCollection. When you use instance method syntax to call this method, omit the first parameter. For more information, see Extension Methods (Visual Basic) or Extension Methods (C# Programming Guide).

Exceptions

Exception Condition
ArgumentNullException

The name argument is nulla null reference (Nothing in Visual Basic) or has zero length.

ControlNameAlreadyExistsException

A control with the same name is already in the ControlCollection instance.

Remarks

This method enables you to add DomainUpDown objects to the end of the ControlCollection.

To remove a DomainUpDown that was added programmatically, use the Remove method.

Examples

The following code example adds a DomainUpDown control to the start of the document, and then sets the background of the control to yellow. To use this example, run it from the ThisDocument class in a document-level project.

Private Sub WordAddDomainUpDown()
    Me.Paragraphs(1).Range.InsertParagraphBefore()
    Dim DomainUpDown1 As Microsoft.Office.Tools.Word. _
        Controls.DomainUpDown = Me.Controls.AddDomainUpDown( _
        0, 0, 90, 15, "DomainUpDown1")
    DomainUpDown1.BackColor = Color.Yellow
End Sub 
private void WordAddDomainUpDown()
{
    this.Paragraphs[1].Range.InsertParagraphBefore();
    Microsoft.Office.Tools.Word.Controls.DomainUpDown
        domainUpDown1 = this.Controls.AddDomainUpDown(
        0, 0, 90, 15, "domainUpDown1");
    domainUpDown1.BackColor = Color.Yellow;
}

.NET Framework Security

See Also

Reference

ControlExtensions Class

AddDomainUpDown Overload

Microsoft.Office.Tools.Word Namespace