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I have a DoubleAnimation call that is triggered on a button press. One button press causes the control to fade in (1000 milliseconds), pressed again it causes it to fade out (500 milliseconds). Now I notice if a user spams this button it will not fade back in. I have no problem with it ever failing to fade out. If the user then clicks again, which toggles the trigger, then clicks once more with a brief (~1 second) pause between clicks the control will then fade in without issue.

private void fader(bool fadeOut)
{

   if ((!fadeOut && gripLbl.Visibility == Visibility.Hidden) ||
       (fadeOut && gripLbl.Visibility == Visibility.Visible))
             return;

   if (fadeOut)
   {
        // Fade in grip
        gripLbl.Opacity = 0;
        gripLbl.Visibility = Visibility.Visible;
        gripLblAnimation = new DoubleAnimation(0, 1, TimeSpan.FromMilliseconds(1000));
   }
   else
   {
        // Fade out grip
        gripLblAnimation = new DoubleAnimation(1, 0, TimeSpan.FromMilliseconds(500));
        gripLblAnimation.Completed += delegate
        { gripLbl.Visibility = Visibility.Hidden; };
   }

   Timeline.SetDesiredFrameRate(gripLblAnimation, 60);
   gripLbl.BeginAnimation(FrameworkElement.OpacityProperty, gripLblAnimation);
}

Any help would be greatly appreciated, the only thing I can seem to find that helps is turning down the fade out timer down below 100 milliseconds. But if possible I would like it to just stop the current animation if it is in progress and start the new one.

I have tried nulling it out, starting a new BeginAnimation with the second parameter being null and using .Freeze() before hand in an attempt to cancel the current animation with no luck.

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  • Yes, I am just doing this all pragmatically because I found it to be easier with the variables I end up using and such. And to be honest I'm just not familiar enough with WPF having recently just moved from WinForms.
    – Lightor
    Apr 22, 2015 at 9:39

1 Answer 1

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You need to incorpate a flag for when it's fading. Something like:

bool fading = true;

So that at the start you can put:

if(Fading) return;

That way if the user is mashing the button it will keep returning (i.e. ignoring them) until the fading boolean is reset at the end of the fade.

fading = false;
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  • My mistake, I have a basic check which I think is good enough? I really just use it to save the unneeded execution of the function. But it does not catch this, which isn't really the problem because I do not want to ignore the request. I want to stop the current fade and start a new one. I edited my sample code.
    – Lightor
    Apr 22, 2015 at 9:31
  • Is your variable 'fadeOut' static?
    – Setherith
    Apr 22, 2015 at 9:40
  • fadeOut is fed in as a parameter.
    – Lightor
    Apr 22, 2015 at 11:05
  • A possible solution to stop it dead in it's tracks and start again would be to attach the process to a thread. That way the thread can be paused or terminated and of course new ones can be created.
    – Setherith
    Apr 22, 2015 at 15:37

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