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You cannot bind to a WPF DataGrid's Columns property, so a workaround is to use use an attached property as found in this SO question/answer. My viewmodel exposes an ObservableCollection containing the DataGridColumns, and I bind it to the DataGrid via this attached property.

A background thread is responsible for populating the collection, and I'm using Dispatcher.Invoke to do this, which I thought would avoid threading issues. The background thread itself works fine, but an exception is raised in the above attached property code:

The calling thread cannot access this object because a different thread owns it.

(in the else if that deals with an Add action, specifically the line dataGrid.Columns.Add(column);).

Any idea what might be wrong?

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  • See this question: stackoverflow.com/questions/7687000/… Jan 30, 2013 at 17:21
  • Could you build the ObservableCollection in the background. But then on the main (UI) thread add the columns?
    – paparazzo
    Jan 30, 2013 at 17:33
  • @Blam not sure I follow. The ObservableCollection is my collection of columns. I'm using MVVM and this attached property is the only way to bind the columns at runtime (I don't know what columns I need at design-time so can't create them in XAML). The background thread performs a number of tasks - retrieves data, populates a collection to bind to the grid rows, and populates the columns collection. As a last resort I could move this last step out of the background thread and into the UI thread. Creating a dozen items doesn't warrant it being in a background thread. Jan 30, 2013 at 18:42
  • If creating a dozen items does not warrant being on a background thread then why is it a "last resort". What part don't you follow?
    – paparazzo
    Jan 30, 2013 at 19:20

1 Answer 1

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If you are using .NET 4.5, the simplest option is to use BindingOperations.EnableCollectionSynchronization. This allows you to update a collection on a background thread directly, without worrying about synchronization in the binding.

Otherwise, you need to make sure that all changes to your collection happen on the user interface thread. Using Dispatcher.Invoke should work (provided you get the correct Dispatcher instance), though there are more elegant solutions, such as the binding collections in The Helper Trinity and other projects.

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  • I'm using 4.0. I think I'm using the correct Dispatcher instance. If I put a breakpoint in the code and look at the Dispatcher's Thread.ManagedThreadID, it's the same as the main thread's ID. Similarly when the exception is raised, the thread window is showing as being in the main thread. Not sure what else I can check to confirm that I'm on the right threads everywhere. Jan 30, 2013 at 18:36
  • @AndrewStephens Make sure that your collection and the binding was created on the main UI thread, too... Jan 30, 2013 at 18:58
  • Marked as answer as it was almost there, and inspired me to find the problem! Although I was adding my DataGridColumn objects to the ObservableCollection using Dispatcher.Invoke, I wasn't creating them using a Dispatcher, i.e. they were "owned" by the background thread - hence the exception message. Jan 31, 2013 at 8:25

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