RadioButton IsChecked property gets overridden when changing tabs - wpf

I'm sure this behavior is known, but I'm unable to google it. I have following code:
<Window x:Class="ContentControlListDataTemplateKacke.MainWindow"
xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"
xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml"
Title="MainWindow" Height="350" Width="525">
<DockPanel>
<TabControl ItemsSource="{Binding Items}">
<TabControl.ContentTemplate>
<DataTemplate>
<StackPanel>
<Label Content="{Binding Name}" />
<RadioButton Content="Option1" IsChecked="{Binding Option1}" />
<RadioButton Content="Option2" IsChecked="{Binding Option2}" />
</StackPanel>
</DataTemplate>
</TabControl.ContentTemplate>
</TabControl>
</DockPanel>
</Window>
The code-behind is simple:
public partial class MainWindow
{
public MainWindow()
{
InitializeComponent();
DataContext = new ViewModel();
}
}
The ViewModel looks like this:
public class ViewModel : NotificationObject
{
public ViewModel()
{
Items = new ObservableCollection<Item>
{
new Item {Name = "1", Option1 = true},
new Item {Name = "2", Option2 = true}
};
}
public ObservableCollection<Item> Items { get; set; }
}
And an Item like this:
public class Item : NotificationObject
{
public string Name { get; set; }
private bool _option1;
public bool Option1
{
get { return _option1; }
set
{
_option1 = value;
RaisePropertyChanged(() => Option1);
}
}
private bool _option2;
public bool Option2
{
get { return _option2; }
set
{
_option2 = value;
RaisePropertyChanged(() => Option2);
}
}
}
I'm using Prism, so the RaisePropertyChanged raises an PropertyChanged-event. Select the second tab, then the first tab, then the second tab again and voilá, the RadioButtons on the second tab are deselected.
Why?
Another solution apart from Rachels
A colleague of mine just had the idea to bind the GroupName property of the RadioButtons to a unique string of each item. Just change the declaration of the RadioButtons into this:
<RadioButton GroupName="{Binding Name}" Content="Option1" IsChecked="{Binding Option1}" />
<RadioButton GroupName="{Binding Name}" Content="Option2" IsChecked="{Binding Option2}" />
And it works if the Name-property is unique for all items (as its the case for my problem).

WPF is reading all the RadioButtons as part of the same Group, and in a radio button group only one item can be selected at a time.
The load order goes:
Load Tab1
Load Tab1.Radio1. IsChecked = True
Load Tab1.Radio2. IsChecked = True, so set Tab1.Radio2.IsChecked = False
Click Tab 2
Load Tab2
Load Tab2.Radio1. IsChecked = True, so set Tab1.Radio2.IsChecked = False
Load Tab2.Radio2. IsChecked = True, so set Tab2.Radio1.IsChecked = False
By now, Tab2.Radio2 is the only one checked, and all the other Radios have been loaded and Unchecked, so their DataBound values have been updated to false.
Click Tab 1
Load Tab1.Radio1. IsChecked = False
Load Tab1.Radio2. IsChecked = False
If you Radio buttons are unrelated and can both be checked at once, I would suggest switching to CheckBoxes
If they're meant to be grouped and only one item can be selected at a time, I'd suggest switching to a ListBox drawn with RadioButtons, and only storing the SelectedOption in your ViewModel
Here's the style I typically use for that:
<Style x:Key="RadioButtonListBoxStyle" TargetType="{x:Type ListBox}">
<Setter Property="BorderBrush" Value="Transparent"/>
<Setter Property="KeyboardNavigation.DirectionalNavigation" Value="Cycle" />
<Setter Property="ItemContainerStyle">
<Setter.Value>
<Style TargetType="{x:Type ListBoxItem}" >
<Setter Property="Margin" Value="2, 2, 2, 0" />
<Setter Property="Template">
<Setter.Value>
<ControlTemplate>
<Border Background="Transparent">
<RadioButton
Content="{TemplateBinding ContentPresenter.Content}" VerticalAlignment="Center"
IsChecked="{Binding Path=IsSelected,RelativeSource={RelativeSource TemplatedParent},Mode=TwoWay}"/>
</Border>
</ControlTemplate>
</Setter.Value>
</Setter>
</Style>
</Setter.Value>
</Setter>
</Style>
It's used like this:
<ListBox ItemsSource="{Binding Options}"
SelectedValue="{Binding SelectedValue}"
Style="{StaticResource RadioButtonListBoxStyle}" />

I used to have a problem very similar to this one where text was getting cleared when I was switching between views. If I recall correctly the following solution was what worked.
Bind OneWay to the properties and mark these bound properties with an attribute.
Every time you load the view (and hence viewmodel), use reflection on the aforementioned attribute to find the bound properties.
Fire off a PropertyChanged event for each of the properties to update the view correctly.
I think this results from the view loading with default settings and not querying the properties on load since nothing is raising a PropertyChanged event.
Also, it's not part of your question, but you can set the data context in XAML (via the DataContext property in Window) directly so that Visual Studio doesn't have to have an explicit codebehind file.

Related

BarButtonItems and BarSubItems on Bound RibbonControl

I am developing a WPF application using DevExpress controls, such as the Ribbon control. I want to be able to place buttons on the ribbon dynamically. I would like to be able to support both regular buttons and drop-down buttons.
I was thinking something similar to below.
WPF View:
<UserControl.Resources>
<DataTemplate x:Key="RibbonCommandTemplate">
<ContentControl>
<dxb:BarButtonItem RibbonStyle="All" Content="{Binding Caption}"
Command="{Binding (dxr:RibbonControl.Ribbon).DataContext.MenuExecuteCommand,
RelativeSource={RelativeSource Self}}"
CommandParameter="{Binding}" />
</ContentControl>
</DataTemplate>
</UserControl.Resources>
<Grid>
<DockPanel>
<dxr:RibbonControl DockPanel.Dock="Top" RibbonStyle="Office2010">
<dxr:RibbonDefaultPageCategory>
<dxr:RibbonPage Caption="Home">
<dxr:RibbonPageGroup Caption="Dynamic Commands"
ItemLinksSource="{Binding DynamicCommands}"
ItemTemplate="{StaticResource RibbonCommandTemplate}" />
</dxr:RibbonPage>
</dxr:RibbonDefaultPageCategory>
</dxr:RibbonControl>
<Grid/>
</DockPanel>
</Grid>
View Model:
public class RibbonCommand
{
public string Caption { get; set; }
public int CommandCode { get; set; }
public ObservableCollection<RibbonCommand> SubItems { get; set; }
public bool HasSubItems
{
get
{
if (SubItems != null)
return (SubItems.Count > 0);
else
return false;
}
}
}
[POCOViewModel]
public class MainViewModel
{
public ObservableCollection<RibbonCommand> DynamicCommands { get; set; }
public MainViewModel()
{
DynamicCommands = new ObservableCollection<RibbonCommand>();
// Regular buttons.
DynamicCommands.Add(new RibbonCommand() { Caption = "Button 1", CommandCode = 1 });
DynamicCommands.Add(new RibbonCommand() { Caption = "Button 2", CommandCode = 2 });
// Drop-down button.
RibbonCommand dropDownCommand = new RibbonCommand() { Caption = "Drop-Down", CommandCode = 3 };
dropDownCommand.SubItems = new ObservableCollection<RibbonCommand>();
dropDownCommand.SubItems.Add(new RibbonCommand() { Caption = "Sub-Item 1", CommandCode = 31 });
dropDownCommand.SubItems.Add(new RibbonCommand() { Caption = "Sub-Item 2", CommandCode = 32 });
dropDownCommand.SubItems.Add(new RibbonCommand() { Caption = "Sub-Item 3", CommandCode = 33 });
DynamicCommands.Add(dropDownCommand);
}
public void MenuExecute(RibbonCommand command)
{
MessageBox.Show(string.Format("You clicked command with ID: {0} (\"{1}\").",
command.CommandCode, command.Caption), "Bound Ribbon Control");
}
}
This code does successfully populate the ribbon with items I added in my DynamicCommands collection, but I would like to support drop-down buttons for items with anything in the SubItems collection (the third button on my example above).
Is there a way to conditionally change the type of control displayed in a DataTemplate. If the object's HasSubItems is true, I would like a BarSubItem placed on the ribbon. If it is false, I will keep the BarButtonItem.
If this is regular WPF rather than UWP, and if the DataContexts of your subitems are of different types, you can define multiple DataTemplates with DataType attributes in the RibbonPageGroup's resources (where they won't be in scope for anything that doesn't need them), and get rid of that ItemTemplate attribute:
<dxr:RibbonPageGroup
Caption="Dynamic Commands"
ItemLinksSource="{Binding DynamicCommands}">
<dxr:RibbonPageGroup.Resources>
<DataTemplate DataType="{x:Type local:RibbonCommand}">
<!-- XAML stuff -->
</DataTemplate>
<DataTemplate DataType="{x:Type local:SpecialRibbonCommand}">
<!-- Totally different XAML stuff -->
</DataTemplate>
</dxr:RibbonPageGroup.Resources>
<!-- etc -->
For another option, you should be able to write a DataTemplateSelector and give it to the RibbonControl's ToolbarItemTemplateSelector property or the RibbonPageGroup's ItemTemplateSelector property.
Lastly, write one complicated DataTemplate with multiple child controls superimposed in a Grid, and a series of triggers that show only the appropriate one based on properties of the DataContext. If you've only got two different options to handle, this may be the quickest and easiest route.
<DataTemplate x:Key="RibbonCommandTemplate">
<Grid>
<Label x:Name="OneThing" />
<Label x:Name="AnotherThing" />
</Grid>
<DataTemplate.Triggers>
<DataTrigger Binding="{Binding HasSubItems}" Value="True">
<Setter TargetName="OneThing" Property="Visibility" Value="Collapsed" />
<Setter TargetName="AnotherThing" Property="Visibility" Value="Visible" />
</DataTrigger>
<!-- Other triggers for HasSubItems == False, whatever -->
</DataTemplate.Triggers>
</DataTemplate>
This seems pretty crude, but I've done it so much in WPF that I'm getting desensitized to it.
I figured out a way to do this using a DataTemplateSelector class:
using System.Windows;
using System.Windows.Controls;
using RibbonDynamicButtons.ViewModels;
namespace RibbonDynamicButtons.Selectors
{
public class RibbonCommandSelector : DataTemplateSelector
{
public DataTemplate CommandTemplate { get; set; }
public DataTemplate SubCommandTemplate { get; set; }
public override DataTemplate SelectTemplate(object item, DependencyObject container)
{
if(item is RibbonCommand)
{
RibbonCommand command = (RibbonCommand)item;
if (command.HasSubItems)
return SubCommandTemplate;
else
return CommandTemplate;
}
return base.SelectTemplate(item, container);
}
}
}
I added my selector to the xaml as follows:
<UserControl
...
xmlns:Selectors="clr-namespace:RibbonDynamicButtons.Selectors">
<UserControlResources>
<DataTemplate x:Key="RibbonSubItemTemplate">
<ContentControl>
<dxb:BarButtonItem RibbonStyle="SmallWithText" Content="{Binding Caption}"
Command="{Binding (dxr:RibbonControl.Ribbon).DataContext.MenuExecuteCommand,
RelativeSource={RelativeSource Self}}" CommandParameter="{Binding}" />
</ContentControl>
</DataTemplate>
<Selectors:RibbonCommandSelector x:Key="RibbonCommandSelector">
<Selectors:RibbonCommandSelector.CommandTemplate>
<DataTemplate>
<ContentControl>
<dxb:BarButtonItem RibbonStyle="All"
Content="{Binding Caption}"
Command="{Binding (dxr:RibbonControl.Ribbon).DataContext.MenuExecuteCommand,
RelativeSource={RelativeSource Self}}"
CommandParameter="{Binding}" />
</ContentControl>
</DataTemplate>
</Selectors:RibbonCommandSelector.CommandTemplate>
<Selectors:RibbonCommandSelector.SubCommandTemplate>
<DataTemplate>
<ContentControl>
<dxb:BarSubItem RibbonStyle="All" Content="{Binding Caption}"
ItemLinksSource="{Binding SubItems}"
ItemTemplate="{StaticResource RibbonSubItemTemplate}" />
</ContentControl>
</DataTemplate>
</Selectors:RibbonCommandSelector.SubCommandTemplate>
</Selectors:RibbonCommandSelector>
</UserControlResources>
I bind the ItemTemplateSelector to my selector on the RibbonPageGroup:
<dxr:RibbonPageGroup Caption="Dynamic Commands" ItemLinksSource="{Binding DynamicCommands}"
ItemTemplateSelector="{StaticResource RibbonCommandSelector}" />
I did not need to make any changes to the View Model I included on my original question.

Load controls on runtime based on selection

I'm new to XAML and I have a case where I need to change controls based on a selection on a combobox with templates.
For example, let's say that a user selects a template that requires a day of week and a time range that something will be available. I would like that, on the moment of the selection, the control with the information needed get build on the screen and that the bindings get to work as well.
Can someone give me a hint or indicate an article with an elegant way to do so?
Thanks in advance.
The solution you are looking for is a ContentControl and DataTemplates. You use the selected item of the ComboBox to change ContentTemplate of the Content Control.
You question mentions binding so I will assume you understand the MVVM pattern.
As an example, lets use MyModel1 as the Model
public class MyModel1
{
private Collection<string> values;
public Collection<string> Values { get { return values ?? (values = new Collection<string> { "One", "Two" }); } }
public string Field1 { get; set; }
public string Field2 { get; set; }
}
And MyViewModel as the ViewModel
public class MyViewModel
{
public MyViewModel()
{
Model = new MyModel1();
}
public MyModel1 Model { get; set; }
}
And the code behind does nothing but instantiate the ViewModel.
public partial class MainWindow : Window
{
public MainWindow()
{
ViewModel = new MyViewModel();
InitializeComponent();
}
public MyViewModel ViewModel { get; set; }
}
All three are very simple classes. The fun comes in the Xaml which is
<Window x:Class="StackOverflow._20893945.MainWindow" xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation" xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml" xmlns:system="clr-namespace:System;assembly=mscorlib"
xmlns:this="clr-namespace:StackOverflow._20893945"
DataContext="{Binding RelativeSource={RelativeSource Self}, Path=ViewModel}"
Title="MainWindow" Height="350" Width="525">
<Window.Resources>
<DataTemplate x:Key="MyModel1Template1" DataType="{x:Type this:MyModel1}">
<StackPanel>
<TextBlock Text="Template 1"></TextBlock>
<ComboBox ItemsSource="{Binding Path=Values}" SelectedItem="{Binding Path=Field1}" />
</StackPanel>
</DataTemplate>
<DataTemplate x:Key="MyModel1Template2" DataType="{x:Type this:MyModel1}">
<StackPanel>
<TextBlock Text="Template 2"></TextBlock>
<TextBox Text="{Binding Path=Field2}" />
</StackPanel>
</DataTemplate>
</Window.Resources>
<DockPanel>
<StackPanel Orientation="Horizontal" DockPanel.Dock="Top" Margin="2">
<ComboBox x:Name="TypeSelector">
<system:String>Template 1</system:String>
<system:String>Template 2</system:String>
</ComboBox>
</StackPanel>
<ContentControl Content="{Binding Path=Model}">
<ContentControl.Style>
<Style TargetType="{x:Type ContentControl}">
<Style.Triggers>
<DataTrigger Binding="{Binding ElementName=TypeSelector, Path=SelectedItem}" Value="Template 2">
<Setter Property="ContentTemplate" Value="{StaticResource MyModel1Template2}" />
</DataTrigger>
</Style.Triggers>
<Setter Property="ContentTemplate" Value="{StaticResource MyModel1Template1}" />
</Style>
</ContentControl.Style>
</ContentControl>
</DockPanel>
</Window>
The notable points of the view are
The DataContext is initialised on the Window element, allowing for auto-complete on our binding expressions
The definition of 2 template to display 2 different views of the data.
The ComboBox is populated with a list of strings and has a default selection of the first element.
The ContentControl has its content bound to the Model exposed via the ViewModel
The default DataTemplate is the first template with a ComboBox.
The Trigger in the ContentControl's style will change the ContentTemplate if the SelectedItem of the ComboBox is changed to 'Template 2'
Implied facts are
If the SelectedItem changes back to 'Template 1', the style will revert the the ContentTemplate back to the default, ie MyModel1Template1
If there were a need for 3 separate displays, create another DataTemplate, add a string to the ComboBox and add another DataTrigger.
NOTE: This is the complete source to my example. Create a new C#/WPF project with the same classes and past the code in. It should work.
I hope this helps.

How to loop through ItemsControl in WPF?

How can I loop through this ItemsControl and change it's TextBlock background in this Xaml's code behind page on some mouse event. I am new to WPF.
<ItemsControl ItemsSource="{Binding Path= HeaderList}" Name="Headers">
<ItemsControl.ItemTemplate>
<DataTemplate>
<TextBlock Name="Data" Text="{Binding }" Width="100" HorizontalAlignment="Left" PreviewMouseLeftButtonDown="MouseLeftButtonDown_Handler"
MouseEnter="MouseEnter_Handler" MouseLeave="MouseLeave_Handler">
</TextBlock>
</DataTemplate>
</ItemsControl.ItemTemplate>
</ItemsControl>
Thanks in advance!!
Actually my requirement is to change individual TextBlock's background color on different mouse events. So i need to get access of TextBlock in code behind and depending upon login I can change that Textblock's background color accordingly. So i think need to iterate ItemsControl. in case if I bind Background Property then all on property change would have effect on all the Textblocks in that ItemsControl. I don't want it in this way. I want to set and change every individual textblock's color differently.
I have access to single one in the eventhandlers that caused that event, but I want to access all the textblocks that are in itemscontrol and change their color acoording to some logic
Solution with background binding like axelle suggested:
You can iterate through the items in the HeaderList and set the background-property.
The Header class must implement the INotifyPropertyChanged Interface
<Window
xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"
xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml"
xmlns:local="clr-namespace:WpfApplication1" x:Class="WpfApplication1.MainWindow"
Title="MainWindow" Height="350" Width="525">
<ItemsControl ItemsSource="{Binding Path=HeaderList}">
<ItemsControl.ItemTemplate>
<DataTemplate>
<TextBlock Text="{Binding Text}" Background="{Binding Background}" />
</DataTemplate>
</ItemsControl.ItemTemplate>
</ItemsControl>
public partial class MainWindow : Window
{
public class Header : NotificationObject
{
public string Text { get; set; }
public Brush Background { get; set; }
}
public IList<Header> HeaderList { get; set; }
public MainWindow()
{
HeaderList = new List<Header>
{
new Header {Text = "header1", Background = Brushes.Red},
new Header {Text = "header2", Background = Brushes.Blue},
new Header {Text = "header3", Background = Brushes.Chartreuse},
};
DataContext = this;
InitializeComponent();
}
}
If I understand your question correctly, you'd want to bind the TextBlock background to a value in your datacontext, and change that value on your mouse event.
don't loop through the itemscontrol, better use a Trigger to apply the changes to your textblock :)
<ItemsControl ItemsSource="{Binding Path= HeaderList}" Name="Headers">
<ItemsControl.ItemTemplate>
<DataTemplate>
<TextBlock Text="{Binding}">
<TextBlock.Style>
<Style TargetType="TextBlock">
<Style.Triggers>
<Trigger Property="IsMouseOver" Value="true">
<Setter Property="Background" Value="Red" />
</Trigger>
</Style.Triggers>
</Style>
</TextBlock.Style>
</TextBlock>
</DataTemplate>
</ItemsControl.ItemTemplate>

Load UserControl in TabItem

I have a Usercontrol(TabUserControl) which contains a TabControl. The Viewmodel of that UserControl loads ab Observable collection of TabItems. One od those items is another user control. When I just load text in the tabcontrol there is no problem, but how can I load the other user control into the tabitem of the TabUserControl.
I'm using MVVM.
Here's my code:
public class TabItem
{
public string Header { get; set; }
public object Content { get; set; } // object to allow all sort of items??
}
The Viewmodel of the TabUserControl
public class TabViewModel
{
public ObservableCollection<TabItem> Tabs {get;set;}
public TabViewModel()
{
Tabs = new ObservableCollection<TabItem>();
//Tabs.Add(new TabItem { Header = "Overview", Content = new OverviewViewModel() }); How to load a usercontrol here if it's in the ItemCollection?
Tabs.Add(new TabItem { Header = "Overview", Content = "Bla bla bla" });
Tabs.Add(new TabItem { Header = "Two", Content = "Two's content" });
}
}
And then the TabControl XAML:
<TabControl x:Name="_tabControl"
ItemsSource="{Binding Tabs}">
<TabControl.ItemContainerStyle>
<Style TargetType="TabItem">
<Setter Property="Header"
Value="{Binding Header}" />
<Setter Property="Content"
Value="{Binding Content}" />
</Style>
</TabControl.ItemContainerStyle>
</TabControl>
It works as long as I dont load the viewmodel of the usercontrol in the tabItems collection. how can I make the UserTabControl load on to the TabItem?
The intention is that every tabitem will contain a usercontrol. Each usercontrol then does it's own thing.
Hope someone can help me as I am a WPF beginner.
Thx!
Ideally, the TabControl.ItemsSource should be set to a collection of ViewModels, and DataTemplates should be used to tell the WPF to draw each ViewModel with a specific UserControl.
This keeps between your business logic (ViewModels) completely separate from your UI (Views)
For example,
<TabControl x:Name="MyTabControl"
ItemsSource="{Binding TabViewModels}"
SelectedItem="{Binding SelectedTabViewModel}">
<TabControl.Resources>
<DataTemplate DataType="{x:Type my:ViewModelA}">
<my:ViewAUserControl />
</DataTemplate>
<DataTemplate DataType="{x:Type my:ViewModelB}">
<my:ViewBUserControl />
</DataTemplate>
<DataTemplate DataType="{x:Type my:ViewModelC}">
<my:ViewCUserControl />
</DataTemplate>
</TabControl.Resources>
<TabControl.ItemContainerStyle>
<Style TargetType="TabItem">
<Setter Property="Header" Value="{Binding Header}" />
</Style>
</TabControl.ItemContainerStyle>
</TabControl>
ViewModel containing TabControl's DataContext:
TabViewModels = new ObservableCollection<ITabViewModel>();
TabViewModels.Add(new ViewModelA { Header = "Tab A" });
TabViewModels.Add(new ViewModelB { Header = "Tab B" });
TabViewModels.Add(new ViewModelC { Header = "Tab C" });
SelectedTabViewModel = TabViewModels[0];
Thanks Rachel for your answer. But it enforces declaring the DataContext during compile time itself. Like you did, relating each of the Views to their respective ViewModels in the DataTemplate of TabControl. We can achieve dynamic View-ViewModel linking when move this out to ViewModel. Here's how:
XAML:
<TabControl.ItemContainerStyle>
<Style TargetType="TabItem">
<Setter Property="Header" Value="{Binding Header}" />
<Setter Property="Content" Value="{Binding Content}" />
</Style>
</TabControl.ItemContainerStyle>
VM:
public ObservableCollection<TabItem> TabItems { get; set; }
public MainWindowViewModel()
{
TabItems = new ObservableCollection<TabItem>
{
new TabItem{Content = new TabAView() {DataContext = new TabAViewModel()}, Header = "Tab A"},
new TabItem{Content = new TabBView(), Header = "Tab B"}
};
}
We can even make use of Action delegates to delay and invoke initialization of the TabItems only upon Tab SelectionChangedEvent. This achieves lot of memory saving if the UserControl Views have many UI elements.

Binding ContentControl to an ObservableCollection if Count == 1

how can I bind the Content of a ContentControl to an ObservableCollection.
The control should show an object as content only if the ObservableColelction contains exactly one object (the object to be shown).
Thanks,
Walter
This is easy. Just use this DataTemplate:
<DataTemplate x:Key="ShowItemIfExactlyOneItem">
<ItemsControl x:Name="ic">
<ItemsControl.ItemsPanel>
<ItemsPanelTemplate><Grid/></ItemsPanelTemplate>
</ItemsControl.ItemsPanel>
</ItemsControl>
<DataTemplate.Triggers>
<DataTrigger Binding="{Binding Count}" Value="1">
<Setter TargetName="ic" Property="ItemsSource" Value="{Binding}" />
</DataTrigger>
</DataTemplate.Triggers>
</DataTemplate>
This is used as the ContentTemplate of your ContentControl. For example:
<Button Content="{Binding observableCollection}"
ContentTemplate="{StaticResource ShowItemIfExactlyOneItem}" />
That's all you need to do.
How it works: The template normally contains an ItemsControl with no items, which is invisible and has no size. But if the ObservableCollection that is set as Content ever has exactly one item in it (Count==1), the trigger fires and sets the ItemsSource of the ItmesControl, causing the single item to display using a Grid for a panel. The Grid template is required because the default panel (StackPanel) does not allow its content to expand to fill the available space.
Note: If you also want to specify a DataTemplate for the item itself rather than using the default template, set the "ItemTemplate" property of the ItemsControl.
+1, Good question :)
You can bind the ContentControl to an ObservableCollection<T> and WPF is smart enough to know that you are only interested in rendering one item from the collection (the 'current' item)
(Aside: this is the basis of master-detail collections in WPF, bind an ItemsControl and a ContentControl to the same collection, and set the IsSynchronizedWithCurrentItem=True on the ItemsControl)
Your question, though, asks how to render the content only if the collection contains a single item... for this, we need to utilize the fact that ObservableCollection<T> contains a public Count property, and some judicious use of DataTriggers...
Try this...
First, here's my trivial Model object, 'Customer'
public class Customer
{
public string Name { get; set; }
}
Now, a ViewModel that exposes a collection of these objects...
public class ViewModel
{
public ViewModel()
{
MyCollection = new ObservableCollection<Customer>();
// Add and remove items to check that the DataTrigger fires correctly...
MyCollection.Add(new Customer { Name = "John Smith" });
//MyCollection.Add(new Customer { Name = "Mary Smith" });
}
public ObservableCollection<Customer> MyCollection { get; private set; }
}
Set the DataContext in the Window to be an instance of the VM...
public Window1()
{
InitializeComponent();
this.DataContext = new ViewModel();
}
and here's the fun bit: the XAML to template a Customer object, and set a DataTrigger to remove the 'Invalid Count' part if (and only if) the Count is equal to 1.
<Window x:Class="WpfApplication1.Window1"
xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"
xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml"
xmlns:local="clr-namespace:WpfApplication1"
Title="Window1" Height="300" Width="300">
<Window.Resources>
<Style TargetType="{x:Type ContentControl}">
<Setter Property="ContentTemplate">
<Setter.Value>
<DataTemplate x:Name="template">
<Grid>
<Grid Background="AliceBlue">
<TextBlock Text="{Binding Name}" />
</Grid>
<Grid x:Name="invalidCountGrid" Background="LightGray" Visibility="Visible">
<TextBlock
VerticalAlignment="Center" HorizontalAlignment="Center"
Text="Invalid Count" />
</Grid>
</Grid>
<DataTemplate.Triggers>
<DataTrigger Binding="{Binding Count}" Value="1">
<Setter TargetName="invalidCountGrid" Property="Visibility" Value="Collapsed" />
</DataTrigger>
</DataTemplate.Triggers>
</DataTemplate>
</Setter.Value>
</Setter>
</Style>
</Window.Resources>
<ContentControl
Margin="30"
Content="{Binding MyCollection}" />
</Window>
UPDATE
To get this dynamic behaviour working, there is another class that will help us... the CollectionViewSource
Update your VM to expose an ICollectionView, like:
public class ViewModel
{
public ViewModel()
{
MyCollection = new ObservableCollection<Customer>();
CollectionView = CollectionViewSource.GetDefaultView(MyCollection);
}
public ObservableCollection<Customer> MyCollection { get; private set; }
public ICollectionView CollectionView { get; private set; }
internal void Add(Customer customer)
{
MyCollection.Add(customer);
CollectionView.MoveCurrentTo(customer);
}
}
And in the Window wire a button Click event up to the new 'Add' method (You can use Commanding if you prefer, this is just as effective for now)
private void Button_Click(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
_viewModel.Add(new Customer { Name = "John Smith" });
}
Then in the XAML, without changing the Resource at all - make this the body of your Window:
<StackPanel>
<TextBlock Height="20">
<TextBlock.Text>
<MultiBinding StringFormat="{}Count: {0}">
<Binding Path="MyCollection.Count" />
</MultiBinding>
</TextBlock.Text>
</TextBlock>
<Button Click="Button_Click" Width="80">Add</Button>
<ContentControl
Margin="30" Height="120"
Content="{Binding CollectionView}" />
</StackPanel>
So now, the Content of your ContentControl is the ICollectionView, and you can tell WPF what the current item is, using the MoveCurrentTo() method.
Note that, even though ICollectionView does not itself contain properties called 'Count' or 'Name', the platform is smart enough to use the underlying data source from the CollectionView in our Bindings...

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