How do I automatically scroll to the bottom of a multiline text box?

It seems the interface has changed in .NET 4.0. There is the following method that achieves all of the above. As Tommy Engebretsen suggested, putting it in a TextChanged event handler makes it automatic.

textBox1.ScrollToEnd();

At regular intervals, I am adding new lines of text to it. I would like the textbox to automatically scroll to the bottom-most entry (the newest one) whenever a new line is added.

If you use TextBox.AppendText(string text), it will automatically scroll to the end of the newly appended text. It avoids the flickering scrollbar if you're calling it in a loop.

It also happens to be an order of magnitude faster than concatenating onto the .Text property. Though that might depend on how often you're calling it; I was testing with a tight loop.


This will not scroll if it is called before the textbox is shown, or if the textbox is otherwise not visible (e.g. in a different tab of a TabPanel). See TextBox.AppendText() not autoscrolling. This may or may not be important, depending on if you require autoscroll when the user can't see the textbox.

It seems that the alternative method from the other answers also don't work in this case. One way around it is to perform additional scrolling on the VisibleChanged event:

textBox.VisibleChanged += (sender, e) =>
{
    if (textBox.Visible)
    {
        textBox.SelectionStart = textBox.TextLength;
        textBox.ScrollToCaret();
    }
};

Internally, AppendText does something like this:

textBox.Select(textBox.TextLength + 1, 0);
textBox.SelectedText = textToAppend;

But there should be no reason to do it manually.

(If you decompile it yourself, you'll see that it uses some possibly more efficient internal methods, and has what seems to be a minor special case.)


You can use the following code snippet:

myTextBox.SelectionStart = myTextBox.Text.Length;
myTextBox.ScrollToCaret();

which will automatically scroll to the end.