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I am using a listbox to display a list of items that I am selecting programmatically in a voice activated program. Is there any way to keep the selected item from being clicked on? I do want mouse over functionality, just not clicking on the actual item.

I have tried to set Focusable (does not do anything for what I want) and IsEnabled (disables mouse over)

Here is my current style:

<Style x:Key="GlyphList" TargetType="ListBox">
    <Setter Property="ItemsPanel">
      <Setter.Value>
        <ItemsPanelTemplate>
          <StackPanel Orientation="Horizontal" HorizontalAlignment="Center" IsEnabled="False"/>
        </ItemsPanelTemplate>
      </Setter.Value>
    </Setter>
    <Setter Property="ItemTemplate">
      <Setter.Value>
        <DataTemplate DataType="models:SpellingGlyph">
          <Label VerticalAlignment="Bottom">
            <Label.Template>
              <ControlTemplate>
                <Grid>
                  <TextBlock Name="MainText" Text="{Binding Text}" VerticalAlignment="Bottom" Margin="0,0,5,0"/>
                </Grid>
                <ControlTemplate.Triggers>
                  <DataTrigger Value="True">
                    <DataTrigger.Binding>
                      <MultiBinding Converter="{StaticResource ObjectReferenceEqualityConverter}">
                        <Binding />
                        <Binding Path="SelectedItem" RelativeSource="{RelativeSource FindAncestor, AncestorType=ListBox}"/>
                      </MultiBinding>
                    </DataTrigger.Binding>
                    <Setter TargetName="MainText" Property="Foreground" Value="#75BAFF"/>
                    <Setter TargetName="MainText" Property="FontWeight" Value="SemiBold"/>
                    <Setter TargetName="MainText" Property="FontSize" Value="22"/>
                  </DataTrigger>
                  <DataTrigger Value="True">
                    <DataTrigger.Binding>
                      <MultiBinding Converter="{StaticResource MultiBooleanConverter}"> <!--SelectedItem trumps mouse over-->
                        <Binding ElementName="MainText" Path="IsMouseOver"/>
                        <Binding Path="SelectedItem" RelativeSource="{RelativeSource FindAncestor, AncestorType=ListBox}" Converter="{StaticResource InvertedNullCheckToBooleanConverter}"/>
                      </MultiBinding>
                    </DataTrigger.Binding>
                    <Setter TargetName="MainText" Property="Foreground" Value="#75BAFF"/>
                    <Setter TargetName="MainText" Property="FontWeight" Value="SemiBold"/>
                    <Setter TargetName="MainText" Property="FontSize" Value="22"/>
                  </DataTrigger>
                </ControlTemplate.Triggers>
              </ControlTemplate>
            </Label.Template>
          </Label>
        </DataTemplate>
      </Setter.Value>
    </Setter>
  </Style>
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  • just disable the ItemContainer by setting the ItemContainerStyle. What have you tried?
    – Fede
    Jan 6, 2014 at 20:16
  • Updated my answer....disabling the container makes mouse over not work Jan 6, 2014 at 20:21
  • Similar question stackoverflow.com/questions/20957029/…
    – paparazzo
    Jan 6, 2014 at 20:24
  • Have you tried making it HitTestVisible or not?
    – Tejs
    Jan 6, 2014 at 21:04
  • @Tejs yes, sorry forgot to specify that one Jan 6, 2014 at 21:12

3 Answers 3

2
<ListBox PreviewMouseDown="ListBox_OnPreviewMouseDown"..

private void ListBox_OnPreviewMouseDown(object sender, MouseButtonEventArgs e)
{
    e.Handled = true;
}
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  • 1
    I swear I looked for a mouse down....just was blind. I had a separate solution that I will post, but I actually like this better as this is more of a UI concern than something I should handle in the VM Jan 9, 2014 at 18:49
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Simply set IsHitTestVisible to false

https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.windows.uielement.ishittestvisible(v=vs.110).aspx

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An alternative solution to what I accepted was to add the following in my view model:

     if (_viewModelSetSelectedGlyph != value) return;
    _selectedGlyph = value;
    OnPropertyChanged("SelectedGlyph");

Then, set the _viewModelSetSelectedGlyph each time before actually setting the SelectedGlyph. Then, when the UI tries to set the SelectedGlyph, it would not succeed, only when the view model sets it by also setting the private variable does it succeed.

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