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Point(System::Drawing::Size sz);
public Point (System.Drawing.Size sz);
new System.Drawing.Point : System.Drawing.Size -> System.Drawing.Point
Public Sub New (sz As Size)
Parameters
Examples
The following code example demonstrates how to use the
Equality
operator and how to construct a
Point
from a
Size
or two integers. It also demonstrates how to use the
X
and
Y
properties. This example is designed to be used with Windows Forms. Paste the code into a form that contains a button named
Button1
, and associate the
Button1_Click
method with the button's
Click
event.
private:
void Button1_Click( System::Object^ /*sender*/, System::EventArgs^ /*e*/ )
// Construct a new Point with integers.
Point Point1 = Point(100,100);
// Create a Graphics object.
Graphics^ formGraphics = this->CreateGraphics();
// Construct another Point, this time using a Size.
Point Point2 = Point(System::Drawing::Size( 100, 100 ));
// Call the equality operator to see if the points are equal,
// and if so print out their x and y values.
if ( Point1 == Point2 )
array<Object^>^temp0 = {Point1.X,Point2.X,Point1.Y,Point2.Y};
formGraphics->DrawString( String::Format( "Point1.X: "
"{0},Point2.X: {1}, Point1.Y: {2}, Point2.Y {3}", temp0 ), this->Font, Brushes::Black, PointF(10,70) );
private void Button1_Click(System.Object sender, System.EventArgs e)
// Construct a new Point with integers.
Point Point1 = new Point(100, 100);
// Create a Graphics object.
Graphics formGraphics = this.CreateGraphics();
// Construct another Point, this time using a Size.
Point Point2 = new Point(new Size(100, 100));
// Call the equality operator to see if the points are equal,
// and if so print out their x and y values.
if (Point1 == Point2)
formGraphics.DrawString(String.Format("Point1.X: " +
"{0},Point2.X: {1}, Point1.Y: {2}, Point2.Y {3}",
new object[]{Point1.X, Point2.X, Point1.Y, Point2.Y}),
this.Font, Brushes.Black, new PointF(10, 70));
Private Sub Button1_Click(ByVal sender As System.Object, _
ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles Button1.Click
' Construct a new Point with integers.
Dim Point1 As New Point(100, 100)
' Create a Graphics object.
Dim formGraphics As Graphics = Me.CreateGraphics()
' Construct another Point, this time using a Size.
Dim Point2 As New Point(New Size(100, 100))
' Call the equality operator to see if the points are equal,
' and if so print out their x and y values.
If (Point.op_Equality(Point1, Point2)) Then
formGraphics.DrawString(String.Format("Point1.X: " & _
"{0},Point2.X: {1}, Point1.Y: {2}, Point2.Y {3}", _
New Object() {Point1.X, Point2.X, Point1.Y, Point2.Y}), _
Me.Font, Brushes.Black, New PointF(10, 70))
End If
End Sub
Point(int dw);
public Point (int dw);
new System.Drawing.Point : int -> System.Drawing.Point
Public Sub New (dw As Integer)
Parameters
Examples
The following code example demonstrates how to use the
Point
and
Size.Size
constructors and the
System.Drawing.ContentAlignment
enumeration. To run this example, paste this code into a Windows Form that contains a label named
Label1
, and call the
InitializeLabel1
method in the form's constructor.
void InitializeLabel1()
// Set a border.
Label1->BorderStyle = BorderStyle::FixedSingle;
// Set the size, constructing a size from two integers.
Label1->Size = System::Drawing::Size( 100, 50 );
// Set the location, constructing a point from a 32-bit integer
// (using hexadecimal).
Label1->Location = Point(0x280028);
// Set and align the text on the lower-right side of the label.
Label1->TextAlign = ContentAlignment::BottomRight;
Label1->Text = "Bottom Right Alignment";
private void InitializeLabel1()
// Set a border.
Label1.BorderStyle = BorderStyle.FixedSingle;
// Set the size, constructing a size from two integers.
Label1.Size = new Size(100, 50);
// Set the location, constructing a point from a 32-bit integer
// (using hexadecimal).
Label1.Location = new Point(0x280028);
// Set and align the text on the lower-right side of the label.
Label1.TextAlign = ContentAlignment.BottomRight;
Label1.Text = "Bottom Right Alignment";
Private Sub InitializeLabel1()
' Set a border.
Label1.BorderStyle = BorderStyle.FixedSingle
' Set the size, constructing a size from two integers.
Label1.Size = New Size(100, 50)
' Set the location, constructing a point from a 32-bit integer
' (using hexadecimal).
Label1.Location = New Point(&H280028)
' Set and align the text on the lower-right side of the label.
Label1.TextAlign = ContentAlignment.BottomRight
Label1.Text = "Bottom Right Alignment"
End Sub
Remarks
The low-order 16 bits of the
dw
parameter specify the horizontal x-coordinate and the higher 16 bits specify the vertical y-coordinate for the new
Point
.
Point(int x, int y);
public Point (int x, int y);
new System.Drawing.Point : int * int -> System.Drawing.Point
Public Sub New (x As Integer, y As Integer)
Parameters
Examples
The following code example demonstrates how to use the
Equality
operator and how to construct a
Point
from a
Size
or two integers. It also demonstrates how to use the
X
and
Y
properties. This example is designed to be used with Windows Forms. Paste the code into a form that contains a button named
Button1
, and associate the
Button1_Click
method with the button's
Click
event.
private:
void Button1_Click( System::Object^ /*sender*/, System::EventArgs^ /*e*/ )
// Construct a new Point with integers.
Point Point1 = Point(100,100);
// Create a Graphics object.
Graphics^ formGraphics = this->CreateGraphics();
// Construct another Point, this time using a Size.
Point Point2 = Point(System::Drawing::Size( 100, 100 ));
// Call the equality operator to see if the points are equal,
// and if so print out their x and y values.
if ( Point1 == Point2 )
array<Object^>^temp0 = {Point1.X,Point2.X,Point1.Y,Point2.Y};
formGraphics->DrawString( String::Format( "Point1.X: "
"{0},Point2.X: {1}, Point1.Y: {2}, Point2.Y {3}", temp0 ), this->Font, Brushes::Black, PointF(10,70) );
private void Button1_Click(System.Object sender, System.EventArgs e)
// Construct a new Point with integers.
Point Point1 = new Point(100, 100);
// Create a Graphics object.
Graphics formGraphics = this.CreateGraphics();
// Construct another Point, this time using a Size.
Point Point2 = new Point(new Size(100, 100));
// Call the equality operator to see if the points are equal,
// and if so print out their x and y values.
if (Point1 == Point2)
formGraphics.DrawString(String.Format("Point1.X: " +
"{0},Point2.X: {1}, Point1.Y: {2}, Point2.Y {3}",
new object[]{Point1.X, Point2.X, Point1.Y, Point2.Y}),
this.Font, Brushes.Black, new PointF(10, 70));
Private Sub Button1_Click(ByVal sender As System.Object, _
ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles Button1.Click
' Construct a new Point with integers.
Dim Point1 As New Point(100, 100)
' Create a Graphics object.
Dim formGraphics As Graphics = Me.CreateGraphics()
' Construct another Point, this time using a Size.
Dim Point2 As New Point(New Size(100, 100))
' Call the equality operator to see if the points are equal,
' and if so print out their x and y values.
If (Point.op_Equality(Point1, Point2)) Then
formGraphics.DrawString(String.Format("Point1.X: " & _
"{0},Point2.X: {1}, Point1.Y: {2}, Point2.Y {3}", _
New Object() {Point1.X, Point2.X, Point1.Y, Point2.Y}), _
Me.Font, Brushes.Black, New PointF(10, 70))
End If
End Sub