WorksheetBase.AutoFilterMode Property
Gets or sets a value that indicates whether filtering is currently enabled on the worksheet (that is, whether the filter drop-down arrows are currently displayed).
Namespace: Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel
Assembly: Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel.v4.0.Utilities (in Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel.v4.0.Utilities.dll)
Syntax
'Declaration
Public Property AutoFilterMode As Boolean
Get
Set
public bool AutoFilterMode { get; set; }
Property Value
Type: System.Boolean
true if filtering is currently enabled on the worksheet; otherwise, false.
Exceptions
Exception | Condition |
---|---|
COMException | This property is set to true. |
Remarks
You can set this property to false to disable filtering (that is, to remove the filter drop-down arrows), but you cannot set it to true. To enable filtering and create a filtered list, use the AutoFilter method of a Range object, or use the AutoFilter method of a NamedRange object.
This property indicates only whether filtering is enabled; it does not indicate whether any data is being filtered. To determine whether the worksheet is actively filtering data, use the FilterMode property.
Examples
The following code example creates a filtered list of fruits in a Range, and then uses the AutoFilter property to display the filter criteria for the list. The example then prompts the user to turn off the filter by using the AutoFilterMode property, and finally uses the FilterMode property to display whether the worksheet has a filtered list.
This example is for a document-level customization.
Private Sub ActivateAutoFilter()
Me.Range("A1").Value2 = "Fruits"
Me.Range("A2").Value2 = "Banana"
Me.Range("A3").Value2 = "Apple"
Me.Range("A4").Value2 = "Banana"
Me.Range("A5").Value2 = "Orange"
Me.Range("A6").Value2 = "Apple"
Me.Range("A7").Value2 = "Orange"
Dim NamedRange1 As Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel.NamedRange = _
Me.Controls.AddNamedRange(Me.Range("A1", "A7"), "NamedRange1")
NamedRange1.AutoFilter(1, "Apple", Excel.XlAutoFilterOperator.xlAnd, _
VisibleDropDown:=True)
MsgBox("The current criteria for the AutoFilter is: " & _
Me.AutoFilter.Filters(1).Criteria1.ToString())
If Me.AutoFilterMode Then
If DialogResult.Yes = MessageBox.Show("Would you like to " & _
"turn off the filter?", "Example", MessageBoxButtons.YesNo) Then
Me.AutoFilterMode = False
End If
End If
If Me.FilterMode Then
MsgBox("The worksheet has a filtered list.")
Else
MsgBox("The worksheet does not have a filtered list")
End If
End Sub
private void ActivateAutoFilter()
{
this.Range["A1", missing].Value2 = "Fruits";
this.Range["A2", missing].Value2 = "Banana";
this.Range["A3", missing].Value2 = "Apple";
this.Range["A4", missing].Value2 = "Banana";
this.Range["A5", missing].Value2 = "Orange";
this.Range["A6", missing].Value2 = "Apple";
this.Range["A7", missing].Value2 = "Orange";
Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel.NamedRange NamedRange1 =
this.Controls.AddNamedRange(this.Range["A1", "A7"],
"NamedRange1");
NamedRange1.AutoFilter(1, "Apple",
Excel.XlAutoFilterOperator.xlAnd, missing, true);
MessageBox.Show("The current criteria for the AutoFilter is: " +
this.AutoFilter.Filters[1].Criteria1.ToString());
if (this.AutoFilterMode)
{
if (DialogResult.Yes == MessageBox.Show("Would you like to " +
"turn off the filter?", "Example", MessageBoxButtons.YesNo))
{
this.AutoFilterMode = false;
}
}
if (this.FilterMode)
{
MessageBox.Show("The worksheet has a filtered list.");
}
else
{
MessageBox.Show("The worksheet does not have a filtered list");
}
}
.NET Framework Security
- Full trust for the immediate caller. This member cannot be used by partially trusted code. For more information, see Using Libraries from Partially Trusted Code.