5

I've got an XNA + Silverlight game in Mango: Mostly XNA with some Silverlight UI on top. The problem I'm having is that when you hit a button or interact with a Silverlight control, the touch information is still passed along to the XNA game loop. How do you suppress this?

4
  • Why did the tag windows-phone-mango auto-resolve to windows-phone-7.1 if that's not what is really is?
    – RandomEngy
    Jul 28, 2011 at 16:55
  • It is a synonym. 7.1 is indeed the version of the SDK for the Mango (7.5) OS.
    – Den
    Jul 28, 2011 at 17:43
  • The official name of the new OS is 7.5. Please see: windowsteamblog.com/windows_phone/b/windowsphone/archive/2011/…
    – Todd Main
    Jul 28, 2011 at 23:23
  • 1
    Exactly what I mentioned above. The SDK is 7.1. The OS is 7.5.
    – Den
    Jul 29, 2011 at 8:00

2 Answers 2

4

Wrote up a class to do the tracking for me. After your page loads (in the Loaded handler), create this and give it the root element (so it can attach to the LayoutUpdated event). Register any controls that might overlay the game surface during play. Then just call TouchesControl and pass in the touch position to find out if you should ignore that point or not. It caches the regions of the controls and updates them when there's a layout update.

Should work for rectangular elements moving, changing size or collapsing/expanding.

public class ControlTouchTracker
{
    private List<FrameworkElement> controls = new List<FrameworkElement>();
    private Dictionary<FrameworkElement, ControlRegion> controlBounds = new Dictionary<FrameworkElement, ControlRegion>();

    public ControlTouchTracker(FrameworkElement rootElement)
    {
        rootElement.LayoutUpdated += this.OnLayoutUpdated;
    }

    public void RegisterControl(FrameworkElement control)
    {
        controls.Add(control);
    }

    public void RemoveControl(FrameworkElement control)
    {
        controls.Remove(control);
        controlBounds.Remove(control);
    }

    private void OnLayoutUpdated(object sender, EventArgs e)
    {
        foreach (Control control in this.controls)
        {
            this.RefreshControlBounds(control);
        }
    }

    private void RefreshControlBounds(FrameworkElement control)
    {
        if (this.ControlIsVisible(control))
        {
            try
            {
                GeneralTransform controlTransform = control.TransformToVisual(Application.Current.RootVisual);
                Point offset = controlTransform.Transform(new Point(0, 0));

                this.controlBounds[control] = new ControlRegion
                {
                    Left = (float)offset.X,
                    Right = (float)(offset.X + control.ActualWidth),
                    Top = (float)offset.Y,
                    Bottom = (float)(offset.Y + control.ActualHeight)
                };
            }
            catch (ArgumentException)
            {
            }
        }
        else
        {
            if (this.controlBounds.ContainsKey(control))
            {
                this.controlBounds.Remove(control);
            }
        }
    }

    private bool ControlIsVisible(FrameworkElement control)
    {
        // End case
        if (control == null)
        {
            return true;
        }

        if (control.Visibility == Visibility.Collapsed)
        {
            return false;
        }

        return this.ControlIsVisible(control.Parent as FrameworkElement);
    }

    public bool TouchesControl(Vector2 touchPosition)
    {
        foreach (ControlRegion region in this.controlBounds.Values)
        {
            if (touchPosition.X >= region.Left && touchPosition.X <= region.Right &&
                touchPosition.Y >= region.Top && touchPosition.Y <= region.Bottom)
            {
                return true;
            }
        }

        return false;
    }

    public class ControlRegion
    {
        public float Left { get; set; }
        public float Right { get; set; }
        public float Top { get; set; }
        public float Bottom { get; set; }
    }
}

(edit) Updated example to work with parent elements changing Visibility.

1
  • Still checking the location, but kudos - you got the idea!
    – Den
    Jul 29, 2011 at 8:00
3

Due to the way interop with XNA works, you will always get the touch input processed both by XNA and Silverlight - to some extent, XNA gets the priority, so the Silverlight acts on top of that. What you could do, if you need to ignore specific gesture locations (e.g. where Silverlight buttons are located), you could check the gesture position:

if (TouchPanel.IsGestureAvailable)
{
    if (TouchPanel.ReadGesture().GestureType == GestureType.Tap)
    {
        if (TouchPanel.ReadGesture().Position == new Vector2(120, 120))
        {

        }
    }
}
3
  • There's no way to tackle this in general? I would need to manually maintain these "dead zones"? Maybe I could write something where you register the Silverlight controls to track and it could tell you whether or not the touch point is valid (based on where the control is and if it's visible or collapsed). Then the XNA loop runs this check before processing the touch.
    – RandomEngy
    Jul 28, 2011 at 19:10
  • Just have a specific zone for SL controls and check against it. Or, re-think the way you use SL controls during the game so that a simple touch won't affect the process.
    – Den
    Jul 28, 2011 at 19:58
  • I don't want to constrain my game by cordoning off some "Silverlight" area. I'm going to try my approach of registering them and automatically ignoring touches in the areas where the controls are. The last thing I want is a bug where I've moved the control and forgot to update the magic silverlight-only zone.
    – RandomEngy
    Jul 28, 2011 at 20:20

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