Version

WorkingHourTimeSlotAppearance Property (Owner)

Returns or sets the Infragistics.Win.Appearance object that controls the working hour time slot appearance for this owner in the UltraDayView control.
Syntax
'Declaration
 
Public Property WorkingHourTimeSlotAppearance As Infragistics.Win.AppearanceBase
public Infragistics.Win.AppearanceBase WorkingHourTimeSlotAppearance {get; set;}
Remarks

The Appearance property of an object is used to associate the object with an Appearance object that will determine its appearance. The Appearance object has properties that control settings such as color, borders, font, transparency, etc. For many of the objects in the UltraSchedule, you do not set formatting properties directly. Instead, you set the properties of an Appearance object, which controls the formatting of the object it is attached to.

There are two ways of working with the Appearance property and assigning the attributes of an SSAppearance object to other objects. One way is to create a new Appearance object, adding it directly to the Appearances collection. Then you assign the new Appearance object to the Appearance property of the object you want to format. This method uses a "named" Appearance object that you must explicitly create (and to which you must assign property settings) before it can be used. For instance, you could create an object in the component's Appearances collection and assign it some values as follows:

UltraMonthViewSingle1.Appearances.Add "New1"

UltraMonthViewSingle1.Appearances("New1").BorderColor = Color.Blue

UltraMonthViewSingle1.Appearances("New1").ForeColor = Color.Red

Creating the object in this way does not apply formatting to any visible part of the control. The object simply exists in the collection with its property values, waiting to be used. To actually use the object, you must assign it to the control's (or another object's) Appearance property:

UltraMonthViewSingle1.Appearance = UltraMonthViewSingle1.Appearances("New1")

In this case, only one Appearance object exists. The control's appearance is governed by the settings of the "New1" object in the collection. Any changes you make to the object in the collection will immediately be reflected in the control.

The second way of working with the Appearance property is to use it to set property values directly, such as:

UltraMonthViewSingle1.Appearance.ForeColor = Color.Blue

In this case, an Appearance object is automatically created by the control. This Appearance object is not a member of an Appearances collection and it does not have a name. It is specific to the object for which it was created; it is an "intrinsic" Appearance object. Changes to the properties of an intrinsic Appearance object are reflected only in the object to which it is attached.

Note that you can assign properties from a named Appearance object to an intrinsic Appearance object without creating a dependency relationship. For example, the following code...

UltraMonthViewSingle1.Appearance.ForeColor = UltraMonthViewSingle1.Appearances("New1").ForeColor

...does not establish a relationship between the foreground color of the intrinsic object and that of the named object. It is simply a one-time assignment of the named object's value to that of the intrinsic object. In this case, two Appearance objects exist - one in the collection and one attached to the control - and they operate independently of one another.

If you wish to assign all the properties of a named object to an intrinsic object at once without creating a dependency relationship, you can use the Clone method of the Appearance object to duplicate its settings and apply them. So if you wanted to apply all the property settings of the named Appearance object "New1" to the control's intrinsic Appearance object, but you did not want changes made to "New1" automatically reflected in the control, you would use the following code:

UltraMonthViewSingle1.Appearance = UltraMonthViewSingle1.Appearances("New1").Clone

Note that the properties of an Appearance object can also operate in a hierarchical fashion. Certain properties can be set to a "use default" value, which indicates to the control that the property should take its setting from the object's parent. This functionality is enabled by default, so that unless you specify otherwise, child objects resemble their parents, and formatting set at higher levels of the control hierarchy is inherited by objects lower in the hierarchy.

Example
The following code sample demonstrates how the Owner object's HeaderAppearance, WorkingHourTimeSlotAppearance, NonWorkingHourTimeSlotAppearance, and SelectedTimeSlotAppearance properties can be used to establish a unique look for each owner displayed by the UltraDayView control.

Imports Infragistics.Win
Imports Infragistics.Win.UltraWinSchedule

    Private Sub Button1_Click(ByVal sender As System.Object, ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles Button1.Click
        '	Get a reference to the control's UltraCalendarInfo component
        Dim calendarInfo As UltraCalendarInfo = Me.UltraDayView1.CalendarInfo

        '	Clear the existing owners
        calendarInfo.Owners.Clear()

        '	Hide the unassigned owner
        calendarInfo.Owners.UnassignedOwner.Visible = False

        '	Add 2 owners to the Owners collection
        Dim ownerFrick As Infragistics.Win.UltraWinSchedule.Owner = calendarInfo.Owners.Add("frick", "Frick")
        Dim ownerFrack As Infragistics.Win.UltraWinSchedule.Owner = calendarInfo.Owners.Add("frack", "Frack")

        '	Set up the appearance for the headers
        ownerFrick.HeaderAppearance.BackColor = Color.DarkGreen
        ownerFrick.HeaderAppearance.ForeColor = Color.LightGreen
        ownerFrack.HeaderAppearance.BackColor = Color.DarkRed
        ownerFrack.HeaderAppearance.ForeColor = Color.Pink

        '	Set up the appearance for the working hour time slots 
        ownerFrick.WorkingHourTimeSlotAppearance.BackColor = Color.LightGreen
        ownerFrack.WorkingHourTimeSlotAppearance.BackColor = Color.Pink

        '	Set up the appearance for the non-working hour time slots 
        ownerFrick.NonWorkingHourTimeSlotAppearance.BackColor = Color.DarkGreen
        ownerFrack.NonWorkingHourTimeSlotAppearance.BackColor = Color.DarkRed

        '	Set up the appearance for the selected time slots 
        ownerFrick.SelectedTimeSlotAppearance.BackColor = SystemColors.Highlight
        ownerFrick.SelectedTimeSlotAppearance.BackColor2 = Color.Transparent
        ownerFrick.SelectedTimeSlotAppearance.BackGradientStyle = GradientStyle.Horizontal
        ownerFrack.SelectedTimeSlotAppearance = ownerFrick.SelectedTimeSlotAppearance

        '	Set some UltraDayView properties to display the separate owners
        Me.UltraDayView1.GroupingStyle = DayViewGroupingStyle.DateWithinOwner
        Me.UltraDayView1.MinimumColumnWidth = 150

    End Sub
using Infragistics.Win;
using Infragistics.Win.UltraWinSchedule;
using System.Diagnostics;

		private void button1_Click(object sender, System.EventArgs e)
		{
			//	Get a reference to the control's UltraCalendarInfo component
			UltraCalendarInfo calendarInfo = this.ultraDayView1.CalendarInfo;

			//	Clear the existing owners
			calendarInfo.Owners.Clear();

			//	Hide the unassigned owner
			calendarInfo.Owners.UnassignedOwner.Visible = false;

			//	Add 2 owners to the Owners collection
			Infragistics.Win.UltraWinSchedule.Owner ownerFrick = calendarInfo.Owners.Add( "frick", "Frick" );
			Infragistics.Win.UltraWinSchedule.Owner ownerFrack = calendarInfo.Owners.Add( "frack", "Frack" );

			//	Set up the appearance for the headers
			ownerFrick.HeaderAppearance.BackColor = Color.DarkGreen;
			ownerFrick.HeaderAppearance.ForeColor = Color.LightGreen;
			ownerFrack.HeaderAppearance.BackColor = Color.DarkRed;
			ownerFrack.HeaderAppearance.ForeColor = Color.Pink;

			//	Set up the appearance for the working hour time slots 
			ownerFrick.WorkingHourTimeSlotAppearance.BackColor = Color.LightGreen;
			ownerFrack.WorkingHourTimeSlotAppearance.BackColor = Color.Pink;

			//	Set up the appearance for the non-working hour time slots 
			ownerFrick.NonWorkingHourTimeSlotAppearance.BackColor = Color.DarkGreen;
			ownerFrack.NonWorkingHourTimeSlotAppearance.BackColor = Color.DarkRed;

			//	Set up the appearance for the selected time slots 
			ownerFrick.SelectedTimeSlotAppearance.BackColor = SystemColors.Highlight;
			ownerFrick.SelectedTimeSlotAppearance.BackColor2 = Color.Transparent;
			ownerFrick.SelectedTimeSlotAppearance.BackGradientStyle = GradientStyle.Horizontal;
			ownerFrack.SelectedTimeSlotAppearance = ownerFrick.SelectedTimeSlotAppearance;

			//	Set some UltraDayView properties to display the separate owners
			this.ultraDayView1.GroupingStyle = DayViewGroupingStyle.DateWithinOwner;
			this.ultraDayView1.MinimumColumnWidth = 150;

		}
Requirements

Target Platforms: Windows 10, Windows 8.1, Windows 8, Windows 7, Windows Server 2012, Windows 7, Windows Vista SP1 or later, Windows XP SP3, Windows Server 2008 (Server Core not supported), Windows Server 2008 R2 (Server Core supported with SP1 or later), Windows Server 2003 SP2

See Also