WPF Combobox has:
SelectedValuePath
property that specifies the path to the
property that is used to determine the value of the SelectedValue
property. It's similar to ASP.NET ListItem
's Value
property.
DisplayMemberPath
property that defines a default template
that describes how to display the data objects. It's similar to ASP.NET ListItem
's Text
property.
Let's say you want your Combobox
to show a collection of the following KeyValuePair
objects:
private static readonly KeyValuePair<int, string>[] tripLengthList = {
new KeyValuePair<int, string>(0, "0"),
new KeyValuePair<int, string>(30, "30"),
new KeyValuePair<int, string>(50, "50"),
new KeyValuePair<int, string>(100, "100"),
};
You define a property in your view model returning that collection:
public KeyValuePair<int, string>[] TripLengthList
{
get
{
return tripLengthList;
}
}
Then, your XAML for the Combobox
would be:
<ComboBox
SelectedValue="{Binding FilterService.TripLengthFrom, Mode=TwoWay}"
ItemsSource="{Binding TripLengthList, Mode=OneTime}"
SelectedValuePath="Key"
DisplayMemberPath="Value" />
Where you set SelectedValuePath
and DisplayMemberPath
properties to the desired property names of the objects (Key
and Value
correspondingly) displaying by the Combobox
.
Or, if you really want to add items to Combobox
in code behind instead of using a binding, you can do it as well. For example:
<!--XAML-->
<ComboBox x:Name="ComboBoxFrom"
SelectedValue="{Binding FilterService.TripLengthFrom, Mode=TwoWay}" />
// Code behind
public partial class FilterView : UserControl
{
public FilterView()
{
this.InitializeComponent();
this.ComboBoxFrom.SelectedValuePath = "Key";
this.ComboBoxFrom.DisplayMemberPath = "Value";
this.ComboBoxFrom.Items.Add(new KeyValuePair<int, string>(0, "0"));
this.ComboBoxFrom.Items.Add(new KeyValuePair<int, string>(30, "30"));
this.ComboBoxFrom.Items.Add(new KeyValuePair<int, string>(50, "50"));
this.ComboBoxFrom.Items.Add(new KeyValuePair<int, string>(100, "100"));
}