In Form2 you have
Form1 f1 = new Form1();
f1.amount_sum();
This seems to be a common mistake to create a new Form1 when you want to pass the answer back between forms. The new
keyword does just that, it creates a new Form1, calls the method, does not show the form, the original instance of Form1 is unaffected.
I'll show some steps how to fix this.
1 - Pass Form1 to Form2
The first thing you can do is to simply pass the existing Form1 to Form2 so that Form2 know which Form1 it should update.
public class Form2
{
private readonly Form1 _form1;
public Form2(Form1 form1)
{
_form1 = form1;
}
private void button1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
_form1.amount_sum(); // now this updates the existing form1 instance
this.Close();
}
}
In Form1
private void button1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
Form2 f2 = new Form2(this); // pass this form1 instance to form2
f2.Show();
}
One issue with this is that is creates a strong coupling between Form1 and Form2. If you change something in Form1 it is easy to break Form2 and the other way around.
2 - Pass a delegate
Instead of passing the whole Form1 to Form2 we can simple pass a delegate to an update method that Form2 can run. This creates less coupling between Form1 and Form2, if you call Form2 from Form3 you can pass in the update method of Form3 instead and Form3 will be updated. The same Form2 can be reused without modification.
public class Form2
{
private readonly Action _ammountUpdater;
public Form2(Action ammountUpdater)
{
_ammountUpdater = ammountUpdater;
}
private void button1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
_ammountUpdater(); // now this updates the existing form1 instance
this.Close();
}
}
In Form1
private void button1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
Form2 f2 = new Form2(this.amount_sum); // pass the update method to form2
f2.Show();
}
Now you can change amount_sum
to private since it is now really an internal affair of Form1.
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