2

I'm having problems figuring out how to do this. I have two instances (source & target) that implement INotifyPropertyChanged and I'm tracking the PropertyChanged event for both. What I want to do is run an action any time source.PropertyChanged is raised until target.PropertyChanged is raised. I can do that just fine like this:

INotifyPropertyChanged source;
INotifyPropertyChanged target;

var sourcePropertyChanged = Observable
    .FromEvent<PropertyChangedEventArgs>(source, "PropertyChanged")
    .Where(x => x.EventArgs.PropertyName == sourcePropertyName);

var targetPropertyChanged = Observable
    .FromEvent<PropertyChangedEventArgs>(target, "PropertyChanged")
    .Where(x => x.EventArgs.PropertyName == targetPropertyName);

sourcePropertyChanged
    .TakeUntil(targetPropertyChanged)
    .ObserveOnDispatcher()
    .Subscribe(_ => /*Raises target.PropertyChanged for targetPropertyName*/);

The problem I'm having is I want to ignore the PropertyChanged notifications caused by the actions and only stop taking values when the PropertyChanged event is raised by an external source. Is there a good way to get that to happen?

2
  • What do you mean by 'PropertyChanged notifications by the actions'? What actions? Oct 27, 2010 at 15:19
  • @Ronald I updated my explanation to hopefully be a little clearer but by Action I mean function that doesn't return a value. The part represented by /*Raises target.PropertyChanged for targetPropertyName*/. Oct 27, 2010 at 15:31

3 Answers 3

4

There's no built in way of doing what you're talking about. Here's a simple SkipWhen implementation that skips the next source value each time a value is received on the 'other' sequence:

public static IObservable<TSource> SkipWhen(this IObservable<TSource> source, 
    IObservable<TOther> other)
{
    return Observable.Defer<TSource>(() =>
    {
        object lockObject = new object();
        Stack<TOther> skipStack = new Stack<TOther>();

        other.Subscribe(x => { lock(lockObject) { skipStack.Push(x); });

        return source.Where(_ =>
        {
            lock(lockObject);
            {
                if (skipStack.Count > 0)
                {
                    skipStack.Pop();
                    return false;
                }
                else
                {
                    return true;
                }
            }
        });
    });
}

You're code would then be updated like so (see my note below):

INotifyPropertyChanged source;
INotifyPropertyChanged target;

// See the link at the bottom of my answer
var sourcePropertyChanged = source.GetPropertyChangeValues(x => x.SourceProperty);

// Unit is Rx's "void"
var targetChangedLocally = new Subject<Unit>();

var targetPropertyChanged = target.GetPropertyChangeValues(x => x.TargetProperty)
    .SkipWhen(targetChangedLocally);

sourcePropertyChanged
    .TakeUntil(targetPropertyChanged)
    .ObserveOnDispatcher()
    .Subscribe(_ =>
    {
        targetChangedLocally.OnNext();
        /*Raises target.PropertyChanged for targetPropertyName*/
    });

NB: I recently blogged about a strongly typed IObservable wrapper around INotifyPropertyChanged events; feel free to steal that code.

3
  • That's a pretty nice solution. Unfortunately I'm using Silverlight so I don't have ConcurrentStack available and I'd rather not have to implement one for this. I've updated the tags to show SL. Oct 27, 2010 at 18:45
  • @Bryan - That's not a problem. Replace ConcurrentStack with Stack and either add ObserveOnDispatcher between GetPropertyChangeValues and SkipWhen -OR- do your own locking. I've updated by reply to do the latter (since it's less likely to bite you later) Oct 27, 2010 at 18:58
  • Doh! Thanks. Some days it just doesn't pay to get out of bed. Oct 27, 2010 at 20:02
0

There's no built-in way but you could probably filter out events using the Where extension method for observable. The condition to filter on would be the sender of the event. I suppose that the sender of a target.PropertyChanged event is different than the sender of a PropertyChanged event raised by another source.

I'm not entirely sure if this is an approach you can use.

1
  • Unfortunately the sender will be whatever class is raising the PropertyChanged event, in this case target, no matter what's happening to cause the event to be raised. Oct 27, 2010 at 20:11
0

Using locks in Rx this way is fine. The lock is short lived and doesn't call out to user code.

1
  • FYI - This should be a comment on my answer, rather than an answer in its own right :) Nov 8, 2010 at 9:50

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