5

first of all - I'm sorry if it's a duplicate - been looking around for awhile and couldn't find an answer to that,

We're using caliburn.micro so the solution must be using this tool.

We have a view that is consisted of 9 buttons, however - not all of them will be visible in the same time, it depends on events on the system. Each button visibility to either visible or collapsed based on current status but since it is a large number of buttons, and may increase in the future I'd rather have a single function to do this (receiving a name or an enum and returning visibility) rather than having a large amount of properties to bind each button to.

Is it even an option? I couldn't seem to find a way of doing it in any conventional way.

Since the events are being received from outside the software we're developing doing this on the view level is not really an option (or at least - not a right one)

Edit: Here's a snippet of the view that I wish to modify:

            <Grid Margin="0">
                <Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
                    <ColumnDefinition Width="120" />
                    <ColumnDefinition Width="Auto" />
                </Grid.ColumnDefinitions>

                <uiviews:PhonePadView Grid.Column="0" x:Name="DestinationDn" cal:Bind.Model="UI.ViewModels.PhonePadViewModel" />

                <Button  Grid.Column="1" Content="Dial" Style="{StaticResource PhonePadBasicFunctionsButtons}" x:Name="MakeCall" Visibility="{Binding btnMakeCallVisibility}" />
                <Button  Grid.Column="1" Content="Answer" Style="{StaticResource PhonePadBasicFunctionsButtons}" x:Name="AnswerCall" Visibility="{Binding btnAnswerCallVisibility}" />
                <Button  Grid.Column="1" Content="Hang-up" Style="{StaticResource PhonePadBasicFunctionsButtons}" x:Name="ReleaseCall" Visibility="{Binding btnReleaseCallVisibility}" />
                <Button  Grid.Column="1" Content="Hold" Style="{StaticResource PhonePadBasicFunctionsButtons}" x:Name="HoldCall" Visibility="{Binding btnHoldCallVisibility}" />

            </Grid>

As you can see, I need to have a different property for each of the buttons, and I refuse to believe this is the only way, I do have a property holding the current status (phone is ringing, in a call, dialing etc.) and it's easy to have a function on the VM to tell which button should be visible and which shouldn't, and on top of it we currently have 9 buttons but it may just as easily expand more, so I'm looking for the most modular code possible here

12
  • 1
    Did you consider having 9 instances of a (sub-)ViewModel and constructing the corresponding 1-button View? Jun 8, 2015 at 17:19
  • 1
    I suspect your problem can be solved by dividing it into UserControls with 1 Button. But without seeing any code it's hard to be concrete. Jun 9, 2015 at 6:46
  • 1
    There's not much wrong with the posted code, XAML just isn't a compact language. But you ought to bind through a BooleanToVisibility convertor to boolean properties. Jun 9, 2015 at 7:55
  • 1
    Enable/Disable is easier thanks to Caliburn, just add a CanMakeCall property. Maybe a custom convention will let you do that for the Visibility too, I don't know. Jun 9, 2015 at 7:57
  • 1
    If the button visibility logic is not so complex, why not use a Converter or a MultiValueConverter to decide the visibility? If only ViewModel can decide these based on complex states, then try reducing it into a computed property or two like CurrentVisibleButtonGroup or something and make it an enum or a number. based on that property, decide which buttons should be visible using a simple value converter plugged in between.
    – Mat J
    Jun 9, 2015 at 12:29

2 Answers 2

17

Out of the box, if you name something with the "IsVisible" suffix, Caliburn Micro will toggle visibility.

On the View:

<Grid Name="ConfigEditorIsVisible">
    <TextBlock>Test</TextBlock>
</Grid>

On the ViewModel:

public bool ConfigEditorIsVisible { get; set; }
1
  • 3
    It has to be on the Grid or StackPanel (and I guess WrapPanel), not directly on the control, which should then be put inside the container. The answer is right, it's just an aclaration. Mar 25, 2020 at 20:26
0

So... in the end this is what I did: on the VM:

    private HashSet<string> actionsEnabledSet = null;
    public HashSet<string> ActionsEnabledSet
    {
        get { return actionsEnabledSet; }
        set
        {
            actionsEnabledSet = value;
            NotifyOfPropertyChange(() => ActionsEnabledSet);
        }
    }

Alongside changing the hashset based on the items I wish to have visible.

A (multi) converter with the convert function:

    public object Convert(object[] value, Type targetType, object parameter,
            System.Globalization.CultureInfo culture)
    {
        if (value[0].GetType() == typeof(HashSet<string>))
        {
            if (value[1].GetType() == typeof(string))
            {
                if (((HashSet<string>)value[0]).Contains((string)value[1]))
                    return Visibility.Visible;
            }
        }
        return Visibility.Collapsed;
    }

View button styling: (To avoid duplicate code as much as I could)

    <Style TargetType="Button" x:Key="PhonePadBasicFunctionsButtons" >
        <Setter Property="Margin" Value="0,0,0,0" />
        <Setter Property="Focusable" Value="False" />
        <Setter Property="HorizontalAlignment" Value="Stretch" />
        <Setter Property="Width" Value="75" />
        <Setter Property="Visibility">
            <Setter.Value>
                <MultiBinding Converter="{StaticResource PhoneActionVisibilityConverter1}">
                    <Binding Path="ActionsEnabledSet" Mode="OneWay"/>
                    <Binding RelativeSource="{RelativeSource Self}" Path="Tag" />
                </MultiBinding>
            </Setter.Value>
        </Setter>
    </Style>

And a stackpanel of the buttons that looks like that:

                <Button  Content="Call" Style="{StaticResource PhonePadBasicFunctionsButtons}" x:Name="MakeCall" Tag="MakeCall" cal:Message.Attach="MakeCall" />
                <Button  Content="Answer" Style="{StaticResource PhonePadBasicFunctionsButtons}" x:Name="AnswerCall" Tag="AnswerCall" cal:Message.Attach="AnswerCall" />

Really annoyed I couldn't find a way to bind "tag" to "x:name", but adding new buttons is as easy as adding a single line and it feels better to have the code this way, would love to have any ideas on how to make this better, I think it's elegant but I have a feeling it could be easier to read/implement.

I had to use multibinding as using covnerterproperty is not an option - you cannot bind an element to a property as it seems, hope this'll help to someone in the future - was a nice challange :)

And thank you for everyone who tried to help - you got me out of my box and actually looking for an answer!

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