Highlight field content onFocus - silverlight

Can anyone enlighten me to a way I can Highlight the content of an input field OnFocus preferably by XAML only?
So if a user bring focus to a field, it will highlight the string or whatever is in there so they can for example just tab to it, and replace the existing string as soon as they start typing instead of having to manually highlight and delete it first?
I've seen answers that require code, but wondering if there's a XAML only route? Thanks!

You can use AutoCompleteBox for this purpose and you won't have to write any code to acheieve this functionality. It already have this functionality and it will work as textbox too for you..
Let me know if you require any furter information.
Cheers!
Vinod

I highly doubt there would be XAML code that is equivalent to the TextBox.SelectAll() method.
It should be as easy as attaching each TextBox's GotKeyboardFocus event to a single event handler like this.
private void TextBox_GotKeyboardFocus(object sender, KeyboardFocusChangedEventArgs e)
{
if (sender is TextBox)
((TextBox)sender).SelectAll();
}
<TextBox GotKeyboardFocus="TextBox_GotKeyboardFocus" />

Related

Search control on WP7/WP7.5

Could anyone tell me which controls are used in WP7 / WP7.5 where we go on e-mails reading, and when we click on the "search" button?
It appears on the top of a searchbox (a TextBox) and the middlle/bottom of the page is a little blurred. I need to code an application like this, and I don"t know which control to use.
Thanks a lot.
Best regards
There's no one control that does the exact scenario you described.
You'll have to add a Textbox and a list for search on the bottom by yourself. Then, respond when the user hits the the "Enter" key, like so:
XAML:
<TextBox Name="textBox1" KeyDown="OnKeyDownHandler"/>
C#:
private void OnKeyDownHandler(object sender, KeyEventArgs e)
{
if (e.Key == Key.Enter)
{
//Search the data source you want
}
}
You can use a TextBox and a list box to show the searched result. If you want you can use an image button to show search icon. You can use this button's click event to perform the search operation and can show the result in the listbox below.

A few AvalonDock styling questions (WPF)

I'm trying to implement AvalonDock into my application, but I'm having trouble figuring out some of the styling techniques. If someone could please help with the following couple of questions, I would be very grateful:
1) Is there a way to remove the main "Close" button from a DocumentPane and instead place individual buttons on the tabs?
2) I have custom-styled buttons in my application that are placed inside DockableContent elements. As long as the DockableContent is docked, the button uses my custom template, but if a pull the DockablePane that contains the DockableContent out and have it floating, the button loses its template. Is there some trick to getting this to hold?
Thanks in advance for your help!
With regard to #2, that seems to be a problem in AvalonDock. I have a TabControl that loses its styling when its dockable content is floated. When docked, styling is restored.
The workaround is to reset the styling on the StateChanged event.
private void OnDockableContentStateChanged (object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
if (uxDockableContent.State == DockableContentState.DockableWindow)
{
foreach (TabItem tabItem in uxTabControl.Items)
{
tabItem.Style = FindResource ("TabItemStyle") as Style;
}
}
}
I had the best luck getting around this by just downloading the source code, making my changes, and recompiling the DLL.

WPF TextBox lostfocus as attached property

I have a Grid with many TextBoxes and I want to call NotifyPropertyChanged() method to update some other controls everytime one of these TextBox-es changed the value = lost the focus (I don't want to use PropertyChanged as UpdateSourceTrigger)
This is what I can do:
<Grid TextBoxBase.TextChanged="My_TextChanged" >
...
</Grid>
I need something like:
TextBoxBase.OnLostFocus
Use the lost focus event
TextBox.LostFocus="OnTextBoxLostFocus"
Filter on textboxes ;)
private void OnTextBoxLostFocus(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
if(!(e.OriginalSource is TextBox))
return;
//Do stuff
}
If your properties are not changed, your Textboxes will not be updated however. You should consider mutating the data those other TextBoxes are bound to, instead of using LostFocus to update your model.
Good luck!
TextBoxBase.LostFocus is, I suspect, the event you're looking for.
It's listed here: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.windows.controls.primitives.textboxbase_events.aspx - but it's defined on UIElement - so you possibly want to try UIElement.LostFocus if the above doesn't work in markup.

WPF: Textbox not firing onTextInput event

So basically, I have a bunch of TextBoxes that the user gets to fill out. I've got a button that I want to keep disabled until all the TextBoxes have had text entered in them. Here is a sample XAML TextBox that I'm using:
<TextBox Name="DelayedRecallScore" TextInput="CheckTextBoxFilled" Width="24" />
And here is the function that I'm trying to trigger:
//Disables the OK button until all score textboxes have content
private void CheckTextBoxFilled(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
/*
foreach (TextBox scorebox in TextBoxList)
{
if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(scorebox.Text))
{
Ok_Button.IsEnabled = false;
return;
}
}
Ok_Button.IsEnabled = true;
*/
MessageBox.Show("THIS MAKES NO SENSE");
}
The MessageBox is not showing up when TextInput should be getting triggered. As an experiment I tried triggering CheckTextBoxFilled() on PreviewTextInput, and it worked fine then, meaning that for whatever reason, the function just isn't getting called. I also have a validation function that is triggered by PreviewTextInput, which works as it should. At first I thought PreviewTextInput might somehow be interfering with TextInput, so I took PreviewTextInput off the TextBox, but that hasn't managed to fix anything. I'm completely befuddled by why this might happen, so any help would be appreciated.
Your handler for the TextInput event is not fired because the TextBox is handling the event. You could try using the TextChanged event instead, since really you just want to know when characters were added or removed from the TextBox.
InitializeComponent();
textbox.AddHandler(TextBox.TextInputEvent,
new TextCompositionEventHandler(TextBox_TextInput_1),
true);
Use "PreviewTextInput" instead, it will work.
Create a new class derived from TextBox. In the new class override the OnTextInput method. Your OnTextInput method will get called before the TextBox gets it.

Can't set focus to a child of UserControl

I have a UserControl which contains a TextBox. When my main window loads I want to set the focus to this textbox so I added Focusable="True" GotFocus="UC_GotFocus" to the UserControls definition and FocusManager.FocusedElement="{Binding ElementName=login}" to my main windows definition. In the UC_GotFocus method i simply call .Focus() on the control i want to focus on but this doesn't work.
All i need to do is have a TextBox in a UserControl receive focus when the application starts.
Any help would be appreciated, thanks.
I recently fixed this problem for a login splash screen that is being displayed via a storyboard when the main window is first loaded.
I believe there were two keys to the fix. One was to make the containing element a focus scope. The other was to handle the Storyboard Completed event for the storyboard that was triggered by the window being loaded.
This storyboard makes the username and password canvas visible and then fades into being 100% opaque. The key is that the username control was not visible until the storyboard ran and therefore that control could not get keyboard focus until it was visible. What threw me off for awhile was that it had "focus" (i.e. focus was true, but as it turns out this was only logical focus) and I did not know that WPF had the concept of both logical and keyboard focus until reading Kent Boogaart's answer and looking at Microsoft's WPF link text
Once I did that the solution for my particular problem was straightforward:
1) Make the containing element a focus scope
<Canvas FocusManager.IsFocusScope="True" Visibility="Collapsed">
<TextBox x:Name="m_uxUsername" AcceptsTab="False" AcceptsReturn="False">
</TextBox>
</Canvas>
2) Attach a Completed Event Handler to the Storyboard
<Storyboard x:Key="Splash Screen" Completed="UserNamePassword_Storyboard_Completed">
...
</Storyboard>
and
3) Set my username TextBox to have the keyboard focus in the storyboard completed event handler.
void UserNamePassword_Storyboard_Completed(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
m_uxUsername.Focus();
}
Note that calling item.Focus() results in the call Keyboard.Focus(this), so you don't need to call this explicitly. See this question about the difference between Keyboard.Focus(item) and item.Focus.
Its stupid but it works:
Pop a thread that waits a while then comes back and sets the focus you want. It even works within the context of an element host.
private void ListView_SelectionChanged(object sender, SelectionChangedEventArgs e)
{
System.Threading.ThreadPool.QueueUserWorkItem(
(a) =>
{
System.Threading.Thread.Sleep(100);
someUiElementThatWantsFocus.Dispatcher.Invoke(
new Action(() =>
{
someUiElementThatWantsFocus.Focus();
}));
}
);
}
Just recently I had a list-box that housed some TextBlocks. I wanted to be able to double click on the text block and have it turn into a TextBox, then focus on it and select all the text so the user could just start typing the new name (Akin to Adobe Layers)
Anyway, I was doing this with an event and it just wasn't working. The magic bullet for me here was making sure that I set the event to handled. I figure it was setting focus, but as soon as the event went down the path it was switching the logical focus.
The moral of the story is, make sure you're marking the event as handled, that might be your issue.
“When setting initial focus at application startup, the element to
receive focus must be connected to a PresentationSource and the
element must have Focusable and IsVisible set to true. The recommended
place to set initial focus is in the Loaded event handler"
(MSDN)
Simply add a "Loaded" event handler in the constructor of your Window (or Control), and in that event handler call the Focus() method on the target control.
public MyWindow() {
InitializeComponent();
this.Loaded += new RoutedEventHandler(MyWindow_Loaded);
}
void MyWindow_Loaded(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e) {
textBox.Focus();
}
since i tried a fuzquat's solution and found it the most generic one, i thought i'd share a different version, since some complained about it looking messy. so here it is:
casted.Dispatcher.BeginInvoke(new Action<UIElement>(x =>
{
x.Focus();
}), DispatcherPriority.ApplicationIdle, casted);
no Thread.Sleep, no ThreadPool. Clean enough i hope.
UPDATE:
Since people seem to like pretty code:
public static class WpfExtensions
{
public static void BeginInvoke<T>(this T element, Action<T> action, DispatcherPriority priority = DispatcherPriority.ApplicationIdle) where T : UIElement
{
element.Dispatcher.BeginInvoke(priority, action);
}
}
now you can call it like this:
child.BeginInvoke(d => d.Focus());
WPF supports two different flavors of focus:
Keyboard focus
Logical focus
The FocusedElement property gets or sets logical focus within a focus scope. I suspect your TextBox does have logical focus, but its containing focus scope is not the active focus scope. Ergo, it does not have keyboard focus.
So the question is, do you have multiple focus scopes in your visual tree?
I found a good series of blog posts on WPF focus.
Part 1: It’s Basically Focus
Part 2: Changing WPF focus in code
Part 3: Shifting focus to the first available element in WPF
They are all good to read, but the 3rd part specifically deals with setting focus to a UI element in a UserControl.
Set your user control to Focusable="True" (XAML)
Handle the GotFocus event on your control and call yourTextBox.Focus()
Handle the Loaded event on your window and call yourControl.Focus()
I have a sample app running with this solution as I type. If this does not work for you, there must be something specific to your app or environment that causes the problem. In your original question, I think the binding is causing the problem.
I hope this helps.
After having a 'WPF Initial Focus Nightmare' and based on some answers on stack, the following proved for me to be the best solution.
First, add your App.xaml OnStartup() the followings:
EventManager.RegisterClassHandler(typeof(Window), Window.LoadedEvent,
new RoutedEventHandler(WindowLoaded));
Then add the 'WindowLoaded' event also in App.xaml :
void WindowLoaded(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
var window = e.Source as Window;
System.Threading.Thread.Sleep(100);
window.Dispatcher.Invoke(
new Action(() =>
{
window.MoveFocus(new TraversalRequest(FocusNavigationDirection.First));
}));
}
The threading issue must be use as WPF initial focus mostly fails due to some framework race conditions.
I found the following solution best as it is used globally for the whole app.
Hope it helps...
Oran
I converted fuzquat's answer to an extension method. I'm using this instead of Focus() where Focus() did not work.
using System;
using System.Threading;
using System.Windows;
namespace YourProject.Extensions
{
public static class UIElementExtension
{
public static void WaitAndFocus(this UIElement element, int ms = 100)
{
ThreadPool.QueueUserWorkItem(f =>
{
Thread.Sleep(ms);
element.Dispatcher.Invoke(new Action(() =>
{
element.Focus();
}));
});
}
}
}
I've noticed a focus issue specifically related to hosting WPF UserControls within ElementHosts which are contained within a Form that is set as an MDI child via the MdiParent property.
I'm not sure if this is the same issue others are experiencing but you dig into the details by following the link below.
Issue with setting focus within a WPF UserControl hosted within an ElementHost in a WindowsForms child MDI form
I don't like solutions with setting another tab scope for UserControl. In that case, you will have two different carets when navigating by keyboard: on the window and the another - inside user control. My solution is simply to redirect focus from user control to inner child control. Set user control focusable (because by default its false):
<UserControl ..... Focusable="True">
and override focus events handlers in code-behind:
protected override void OnGotFocus(RoutedEventArgs e)
{
base.OnGotFocus(e);
MyTextBox.Focus();
}
protected override void OnGotKeyboardFocus(KeyboardFocusChangedEventArgs e)
{
base.OnGotKeyboardFocus(e);
Keyboard.Focus(MyTextBox);
}
What did the trick for me was the FocusManager.FocusedElement attribute. I first tried to set it on the UserControl, but it didn't work.
So I tried putting it on the UserControl's first child instead:
<UserControl x:Class="WpfApplication3.UserControl1"
xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"
xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml">
<Grid FocusManager.FocusedElement="{Binding ElementName=MyTextBox, Mode=OneWay}">
<TextBox x:Name="MyTextBox"/>
</Grid>
... and it worked! :)
I have user control - stack panel with two text boxes.The text boxes were added in contructor, not in the xaml. When i try to focus first text box, nothing happend.
The siggestion with Loaded event fix my problem. Just called control.Focus() in Loaded event and everthing.
Assuming you want to set focus for Username textbox, thus user can type in directly every time it shows up.
In Constructor of your control:
this.Loaded += (sender, e) => Keyboard.Focus(txtUsername);
After trying combinations of the suggestions above, I was able to reliably assign focus to a desired text box on a child UserControl with the following. Basically, give focus to the child control and have the child UserControl give focus to its TextBox. The TextBox's focus statement returned true by itself, however did not yield the desired result until the UserControl was given focus as well. I should also note that the UserControl was unable to request focus for itself and had to be given by the Window.
For brevity I left out registering the Loaded events on the Window and UserControl.
Window
private void OnWindowLoaded(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
ControlXYZ.Focus();
}
UserControl
private void OnControlLoaded(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
TextBoxXYZ.Focus();
}
I set it in the PageLoaded() or control loaded, but then I'm calling WCF async service and doing stuff that seems to lose the focus. I have to to set it at the end of all the stuff I do. That's fine and all, but sometimes I make changes to the code and then I forget that I'm also setting the cursor.
I had same problem with setting keyboard focus to canvas in WPF user control.
My solution
In XAML set element to Focusable="True"
In element_mousemove event create simple check:
if(!element.IsKeyBoardFocused)
element.Focus();
In my case it works fine.

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