How to make running WPF application window transparent? - wpf

I have a piece of AutoHotKey script that allows me to set transparency on an active window but it does not work with WPF application like Powershell ISE.
Is there a way to do that?
EDIT: As is stated in the question I need to do that on a running WPF app like Powershell ISE.

Set this in Window element
AllowsTransparency="True" WindowStyle="None" Background="Transparent"

Hi WPF is based on Direct3D, and is a bit different from win32 and forms which is based on GDI/GDI+.
In WPF you do this in your xaml(see example by maximus) or create your own window style.
There is a post here on how you should do this in WPF.
Another slightly related question.
A style :
<Style TargetType="Window" x:Key="TransparentWindowStyle">
<Setter Property="WindowStyle" Value="None"/>
<Setter Property="AllowsTransparency=" Value="True"/>
<Setter Property="Background" Value="Transparent"/>
</Style>
Skip the x:Key and it will be applied to all windows or you have to place in app.xaml or a place where it is shared, and apply it to the window. A bit overkill for just 3 properties, but handy if you are going to do other changes, that should be applied to multiple windows.
Hope it helps,
Stian

Related

ComboBox background windows 10 wpf

How can I give background color for ComboBox in windows 10?
<Style x:Key="ComboBoxError" TargetType="ComboBox">
<Setter Property="Background" Value="#FFFF8888"></Setter>
</Style>
cmbPlayer.Style = Resources("ComboBoxError")
I believe you need to actually find the comboboxes' popup from it's default template and set the background on that.
This example from microsoft shows the make up of a combo box and this stack overflow post shows where it is in the visual tree.

Windows Phone 8.1, How to bind style to view?

I wrote a style for button. Unfortunately, I encountered a problem: font size of the button depends on a value, which I can compute only in the view (specifically, that's DisplayInformation stuff).
Ideally, I would do the following:
<Style x:key="MyStyle" BasedOn="{StaticResource SomeStyle}" TargetType="Button">
<Setter Property="FontSize" Value="{Binding ElementName=rootControl, Path=SomeProperty" />
</Style>
Then, I would simply provide necessary properties in view class. But that simply doesn't work (does nothing, no messages, no errors).
How can I solve this problem?
Assigning a binding to a setter value is not supported in the Windows Runtime. (It might be supported in WPF and Silverlight 5, however).
If you google around, there are workarounds, but they're kind of hacky. See this, which uses attached properties and a binding helper class.

Specifying TextOptions at Control level for clearer fonts

So I'm trying to take advantage of all the TextOptions introduced in SL5 (TextRenderingMode, TextHintingMode, TextFormattingMode) and get a nice uniform (performance minded) Segeo UI font throughout an app.
My problem lies in the fact that these don't seem to be getting inherited through all the controls. I set them as resources like;
<TextFormattingMode x:Key="THETextFormattingMode">Display</TextFormattingMode>
<TextHintingMode x:Key="THETextHintingMode">Fixed</TextHintingMode>
<TextRenderingMode x:Key="THETextRenderingMode">Auto</TextRenderingMode>
Then I have them set as setters on individual controls like TextBlock and TextBox like;
<Setter Property="TextOptions.TextFormattingMode" Value="{StaticResource THETextFormattingMode}" />
<Setter Property="TextOptions.TextHintingMode" Value="{StaticResource THETextHintingMode}" />
<Setter Property="TextOptions.TextRenderingMode" Value="{StaticResource THETextRenderingMode}" />
Except I'm seeing discrepancies between the controls still, example image below with "tt" taken as a screen shot from the same screen. The "tt" on the left is from a TextBox and the one on the right is from a TextBlock which both have the TextOptions.*Mode set the same.
What am I missing here? Why are they not identical? The text from the TextBlock ("tt" image on the right) appears sharper.
Maybe different default colors in TextBlock and TextBox for Foreground and Background result in this effect when combined/overlapping.
Have you tried to set them both to Foreground="#FFFFFF" and Background="#000000"?

Combobox background not being applied in windows 8

I am a little confused with wpf themes. I would like to have the wpf screens look the same on Vista, Windows 7 and Windows 8. So I have styled the components accordingly and they don't pose problems except when run on Windows 8. For example I have a combobox and I am changing its default background in xaml like this.
<Style TargetType="{x:Type ComboBox}" >
<Setter Property="FontStyle" Value="Normal"/>
<Setter Property="Height" Value="24" />
<Setter Property="Background" Value="{StaticResource GradientButtonBackgroundBrush}"/>
</Style>
The combobox Background property has no effect in windows 8 and all I get is a flat rectangle with a arrow on right (the default windows 8 combobox, which is rather poorly designed!).
So, my question is that how do I get the combobox look the same on all version of windows. I tried adding windows Aero theme in my App.xaml like below, but it has no effect on the combobox display. Here is how I added Aero theme
<Application.Resources>
<ResourceDictionary>
<ResourceDictionary.MergedDictionaries>
<ResourceDictionary Source="/PresentationFramework.Aero;component/themes/aero.normalcolor.xaml"/>
</ResourceDictionary.MergedDictionaries>
</ResourceDictionary>
There is also another doubt regarding themes. I am building the wpf application on a windows 7 machine, which by default (I believe) has Aero Theme set. So, all my styles are based on the Aero theme when viewed on Windows 7 machine. What happens if I run the application on say XP. Then do I need to add an entry for the resource dictionary (Aero theme) in App.xaml as listed in code above?
I know my question is a bit vague, but believe me, I am really confused with default themes of wpf on different Windows versions.
EDIT:
I still can't get combobox to style according to my needs. The combobox still appears like a gray rectangle.
Here is what I did. I downloaded the Aero.NormalColor.xaml from microsoft's site and included in themes folder of application. Then I added the following in App.xaml
<ResourceDictionary>
<ResourceDictionary.MergedDictionaries>
<ResourceDictionary Source="/Themes/Aero.NormalColor.xaml"/>
</ResourceDictionary.MergedDictionaries>
</ResourceDictionary>
Then I Compiled the application and deployed on Windows 8. Still the same combobox as was shown previously. Note that all other elements get styled properly according to the theme. I did the same with Luna.Metallic.xaml and every element gets styled except the ComboBox.
I believe that when I load a particular theme, which defines styles with ControlTemplate, then it should be picked by wpf. I am confused as to why only the ComboBox even after giving it a Aero (or Luna) Control Template doesn't change its appearance. Any ideas ?
EDIT-2
Screen shot of combobox appearance on Windows 8
Well the ComboBox clickable area is actually a ToggleButton
and if you look at the Style for that ToggleButton in Windows-8, you see something like:
<ControlTemplate TargetType="{x:Type ToggleButton}">
<Border x:Name="templateRoot"
Background="{StaticResource ComboBox.Static.Background}"
BorderBrush="{StaticResource ComboBox.Static.Border}"
BorderThickness="{TemplateBinding BorderThickness}"
SnapsToDevicePixels="true">
...
As you can see from above, Background used is not a {TemplateBinding Background} but {StaticResource ComboBox.Static.Background}. Hence why you see no effect when you set the Background property in Windows-8 for that ComboBox
If your looking to carry a Style across the different OS Versions(Without having to backtrack and keep checking if new versions screwed up your over-rides), simple rule is Create it yourself.
Create a Style and set it to be applied by TargetType and without a Key to get applied automatically. That way in any OS it's your Style that gets used and not the default underlying one.
This thus guarantees your code run's as you expect on every single OS. Base your Style on the default's of any OS and tweak it to your heart's content.
side-note:
From a usability POV giving the user a Windows-7 ComboBox in an app that run's on Windows-8 is not very nice(unless your entire app looks like a Windows-7 app which is even worse). Your expecting the user to get used to your app's Style's and forget what he's used to from every other app he uses in his OS that use default Styles based on OS. If you have specific reasons for doing so, go ahead but do consider the implications.
Just for example you stated the Windows-8 Style is something your not a fan of, well I'm the opposite. I actually do like the Windows-8 clean and simple look. No distractions to the UserExperience with flashing gradients and things that throw you off the content your putting in front of them. This is an argument that goes on forever. Just be warned abt what the end-user expects and thinks than just what you think is good while writing your program.
Update:
Firstly comment on the relevant answer please. Your answer and your comment update has no relation.
Ok and as for your question edit, what you tried has not worked in windows-8 because PresentationFramework.Aero.dll does not exist in Windows-8 which is what holds Aero.NormalColor.xaml. In Windows-8 your options are PresentationFramework.Aero2.dll which is default and PresentationFramework.AeroLite.dll which I think is used by Windows Server 2012(Not Sure)
Try to compile your program on Windows-8 and you'll see it does not even want to compile.
You'll have to explicitly add a reference to PresentationFramework.Aero and also PresentationUI(which i think is part of .net3) to your project.
Then you'll have to edit your Aero.NormalColor.xaml to something like:
<ResourceDictionary xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"
xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml"
xmlns:theme="clr-namespace:Microsoft.Windows.Themes;assembly=PresentationFramework.Aero"
xmlns:ui="clr-namespace:System.Windows.Documents;assembly=PresentationUI">
...
^^ we explicitly state the assembly for Aero Theme. I don't use Windows-7 so Am not sure if that's all that's needed. but you can give that a try.
Try to compile your code in Windows-8 to make sure it will work fine on Windows-8
Finally, after hours of frustration, I came accross an explanation post here. Scroll for the LONG ANSWER. It explains exactly the scenario I have been facing particularly Aero style not getting applied to my Combobox. The link explains very well why we need to add a BasedOn attribute to every element that we style if we dont want the default OS style being picked up. So adding this BasedOn for the Combobox got it working for me.
<Style TargetType="{x:Type ComboBox}" BasedOn="{StaticResource {x:Type ComboBox}}">
Now the Aero theme style is used for the combobox. As #Viv pointed out it may also require copying of PresentationFramework.Aero.dll and PresentationUI.dll to the windows 8 machine as they are not supplied with the OS.
Thanks,
Nirvan
I did a bit of a hack on the built-in template. Not the cleanest solution, but removes the headache of having to roll my own template. The code behind basically binds the built-in template border's properties with the combo box's properties.
<Style TargetType="ComboBox">
<Setter Property="Border.Background" Value="White"/>
<EventSetter Event="Loaded" Handler="ComboBox_Loaded"/>
<Style.Triggers>
<Trigger Property="IsReadOnly" Value="True">
<Setter Property="Background" Value="Transparent"/>
<Setter Property="BorderBrush" Value="Transparent"/>
</Trigger>
<Trigger Property="IsFocused" Value="True">
<Setter Property="Background" Value="{StaticResource ResourceKey=FocusedControlBackcolorBrush}"/>
<Setter Property="BorderBrush" Value="{StaticResource ResourceKey=FocusedControlBorderBrush}"/>
</Trigger>
<Trigger Property="IsMouseOver" Value="True">
<Setter Property="BorderBrush" Value="{StaticResource ResourceKey=FocusedControlBorderBrush}"/>
</Trigger>
</Style.Triggers>
</Style>
private void ComboBox_Loaded(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
var comboBox = sender as ComboBox;
var toggleButton = comboBox.Template?.FindName("toggleButton", comboBox) as ToggleButton;
var border = toggleButton?.Template.FindName("templateRoot", toggleButton) as Border;
if (border != null)
{
Binding b = new Binding("Background");
b.RelativeSource = new RelativeSource(RelativeSourceMode.FindAncestor, typeof(ComboBox), 1);
BindingOperations.SetBinding(border, Control.BackgroundProperty, b);
b = new Binding("BorderBrush");
b.RelativeSource = new RelativeSource(RelativeSourceMode.FindAncestor, typeof(ComboBox), 1);
BindingOperations.SetBinding(border, Control.BorderBrushProperty, b);
}
}
In Response to #Viv
#Viv, I feel that your answer was very clear, but somehow your views/suggestions aren't digestable to me and I will briefly mention why
Your Suggestion
If your looking to carry a Style across the different OS Versions(Without having to backtrack and keep checking if new versions screwed up your over-rides), simple rule is Create it yourself.
It seems impracticable. The very idea of themes is creation of consistent look for all elements in the application and accross all platforms. So, if I use a particular theme provided by the framework, no matter what, I should be able to achieve a satisfactory level of consistency, atleast on major current platforms. Above all, not every one has the expertise to create all the styles and templates from scratch. The concept of themes should be,
"The framework provider is providing the themes that will work well for normal scenarios and if anyone wishing to roll out his themes he is welcome to do so".
Instead here the concept seems like
"The framework provider is providing theme and it is not guranted that it will be consistent and work without breaking. So always roll out your themes"
Your quote
As you can see from above, Background used is not a {TemplateBinding Background} but {StaticResource ComboBox.Static.Background}. Hence why you see no effect when you set the Background property in Windows-8 for that ComboBox
I don't know whose idea it was to make a template that way! Must be out of his minds or I am too dumb to understand the advantages. Just imagine that I am using some Blue colored theme in my application and tommorrow, on Windows 9, somebody defines a Red as {StaticResource ComboBox.Static.Background}. So, guess what, I have a fancy window screen now with all my elements themed "Blue" and only the combobox's appear "Red". I mean the very idea of theme is broken here!
Your side note
Just for example you stated the Windows-8 Style is something your not a fan of, well I'm the opposite. I actually do like the Windows-8 clean and simple look.
My combobox looks like a disabled button and I couldn't even change its background! The buttons don't look like they are clickable! Any way as you said this is a personal choice, ofcourse.
My Conclusion
I will wait for some time if some one has any suggestions on how I get the combobox working on windows 8. Your answer brings forward the truth, so I would be happy to mark it a correct if I don't get any alternative solution.
Nirvan
The newer template has a Grid->ToggleButton->Border with a hardcoded background colour which does not respect any background styles. Based on the answer from #Matstar I made a way to sync the background colour across.
You can still set the binding to background colour and the code will pick this up and reapply this when needed:
<ComboBox ItemsSource="{Binding Values}" x:Name="Cbo2"
Background="{Binding Path=SelectedValueBgColor}" ... />
Then in xaml.cs
cbo.Loaded += (sender, args) =>
{
var comboBox = sender as ComboBox;
if (comboBox != null)
{
var toggleButton = comboBox.Template?.FindName("toggleButton", comboBox) as ToggleButton;
var border = toggleButton?.Template.FindName("templateRoot", toggleButton) as Border;
if (border != null)
{
var existing = BindingOperations.GetBinding(comboBox, BackgroundProperty);
BindingOperations.SetBinding(border, BackgroundProperty, existing);
}
}
};
Make sure your background binding never returns null
If you have no meaningful value return transparent or white or some other default. If binding to a background that returns null the combobox will stop working.
Make sure you notify property changed on your background binding if it needs refreshing when an event happens.

How can I access the default styles for a theme?

In our WPF application, we have a custom listbox that when unstyled, matches the default Windows theme for things like the highlighted, hovered or selected items (i.e. nice blue translucent gradient.)
However, when we try creating our own ListBoxItem template and use values like in this code...
<Trigger Property="Selector.IsSelected" Value="True">
<Setter TargetName="Bd" Property="Panel.Background" Value="{DynamicResource {x:Static SystemColors.HighlightBrushKey}}" />
<Setter Property="TextElement.Foreground" Value="{DynamicResource {x:Static SystemColors.HighlightTextBrushKey}}" />
</Trigger>
...the control loses all traces of the Aero theme reverting to the old Win95/Classic look. How can we say 'Hey... apply the theme's 'highlighted' style to our border.'?
Again, the resources are obviously loaded as they're there until we re-template the control, but how are we supposed to access the built-in styles of the theme? After all, that 'selection' look is all over the place... ListBox, ComboBox, ListView, everywhere. We just want it in our control too without having to reinvent the wheel.
Note: We used the ShowMeTheTemplate.exe app to get the default 'Aero' style, but again, that's not what we're seeing when we run it.
You can use BasedOn="{StaticResource {x:Type ItemType}}" in your Style to modify the existing one however there is no way to merge part of a default template with your custom template, templates are monolithic.
Your answer appears to be here:
How to change WPF Listbox/ListBoxItem DataTemplate for selected item WITHOUT affecting style & theming?
....you should use ItemsContainerStyle instead of just defining a replacement ItemTemplate...and define your Style using BasedOn to inherit the default style defined for your FrameworkElement element by the theme.
There are also some other techniques you can use to leverage the default style defined by a theme (...just gives you extra options).
http://corneliutusnea.wordpress.com/2009/12/07/merging-wpfthemes-with-your-own-styles/
And yet another technique not covered above that uses a markup extension to merge together some styles (i.e. you could merge the default style and your style).
http://www.zagstudio.com/blog/384#.UDpfPqVum6M
XAML Combine Styles
http://swdeveloper.wordpress.com/2009/01/03/wpf-xaml-multiple-style-inheritance-and-markup-extensions/

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