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I have what seems to be a fairly simple scenario that I am trying to implement in Silverlight, but despite all the incredibly powerful transitions functionality in Silverlight/Blend 4, I just cannot work out how to do it.

I have a layout that boils down to this:

<UserControl>
    <Grid>
        <StackPanel>
            <Button x:Name="Button1" />
            <Button x:Name="Button2" />
            <Button x:Name="Button3" />
            <Button x:Name="Button4" />
        </StackPanel>
        <Grid x:Name="Page1" />
        <Grid x:Name="Page2" />
        <Grid x:Name="Page3" />
        <Grid x:Name="Page4" />
    </Grid>
</UserControl>

At first, all four page grids are hidden and scaled to zero size, but when you click its corresponding button, the page should appear with a growing animation. When you click another button, the previous page should disappear with a shrinking animation, and another page should appear with a growing animation. In this way, you can use the buttons to go between all four pages.

The "right" way to do this, from what I've read, is to use visual states on the user control. So I created four states, Page1 to Page4, and for each state set the appropriate page grid to display. I then put commands on the buttons to change the visual state of the user control. This worked fine, and I could switch between the pages, but when I started trying to define the animations between the states I had problems.

At first, I thought I could define a 'To *' and 'From *' animation for each state. So when you were in state Page1, and clicked on the button to go to state Page2, it would play the 'From *' animation hiding Page1, then a 'To *' animation displaying Page2. But this doesn't work. Even if you have defined a 'To *' and 'From *' animation for each state, Silverlight only plays the 'To *' animation, and completely ignores the 'From *' animation!

Even worse, it seems this behaviour is how Silverlight is supposed to work, even though it makes no sense at all! It means if I want to have each page shrink and then another page grow in its place, I would have to define a separate transition from each state to each other state! For my current four pages, this would mean twelve separate transitions, but when I want to increase the number of pages, this number will shoot up. Ten pages would require 9*9 = 81 transitions! All to get the current page to shrink, and the new page to grow.

I can't believe this there isn't a better way to handle what seems to be such a simple scenario, but nothing I can find seems to say how. I could probably hack it together using codebehind that modifies storyboards, but I want to allow viewing and editing the page grids in Blend, and also everything I read says to avoid using codebehind and use View Models and visual states to handle things

Please tell me I'm missing something obvious?

1 Answer 1

3

In Blend, you just click on the state in the States tab to start state recording, define what the state should look like, and set the state transition duration.

You shouldn't have to worry about each individual state transition permutation, unless you wanted each one to be different.

If your states use properties that can't be "linearly" animated (like changing Visibility), check the FluidLayout button.

Edit: You can create the "complete shrink and then grow" effect you describe using only one additional storyboard per state -- the Any -> {State} transition, setting the BeginTime to delay before growing the current element.

<UserControl
xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"
xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml"
xmlns:d="http://schemas.microsoft.com/expression/blend/2008"
xmlns:mc="http://schemas.openxmlformats.org/markup-compatibility/2006"
xmlns:i="http://schemas.microsoft.com/expression/2010/interactivity" xmlns:ei="http://schemas.microsoft.com/expression/2010/interactions"
mc:Ignorable="d"
x:Class="CommandingLeakWithScrollbar.UserControl1"
d:DesignWidth="640" d:DesignHeight="480">

<Grid x:Name="LayoutRoot">
    <VisualStateManager.VisualStateGroups>
        <VisualStateGroup x:Name="VisualStateGroup">
            <VisualStateGroup.Transitions>
                <VisualTransition GeneratedDuration="0:0:1"/>
                <VisualTransition GeneratedDuration="0:0:1" To="Page1">
                    <Storyboard>
                        <DoubleAnimation BeginTime="0:0:1" Duration="0:0:1" To="640" Storyboard.TargetProperty="(FrameworkElement.Width)" Storyboard.TargetName="grid1" d:IsOptimized="True" />
                        <DoubleAnimation BeginTime="0:0:1" Duration="0:0:1" To="480" Storyboard.TargetProperty="(FrameworkElement.Height)" Storyboard.TargetName="grid1" d:IsOptimized="True"/>
                    </Storyboard>
                </VisualTransition>
                <VisualTransition GeneratedDuration="0:0:1" To="Page2">
                    <Storyboard>
                        <DoubleAnimation BeginTime="0:0:1" Duration="0:0:1" To="640" Storyboard.TargetProperty="(FrameworkElement.Width)" Storyboard.TargetName="grid2" d:IsOptimized="True" />
                        <DoubleAnimation BeginTime="0:0:1" Duration="0:0:1" To="480" Storyboard.TargetProperty="(FrameworkElement.Height)" Storyboard.TargetName="grid2" d:IsOptimized="True"/>
                    </Storyboard>
                </VisualTransition>
                <VisualTransition From="None" GeneratedDuration="0:0:1" To="Page1"/>
                <VisualTransition From="None" GeneratedDuration="0:0:1" To="Page2"/>
            </VisualStateGroup.Transitions>
            <VisualState x:Name="None"/>
            <VisualState x:Name="Page1">
                <Storyboard>
                    <DoubleAnimation Duration="0" To="640" Storyboard.TargetProperty="(FrameworkElement.Width)" Storyboard.TargetName="grid1" d:IsOptimized="True" />
                    <DoubleAnimation Duration="0" To="480" Storyboard.TargetProperty="(FrameworkElement.Height)" Storyboard.TargetName="grid1" d:IsOptimized="True" />
                </Storyboard>
            </VisualState>
            <VisualState x:Name="Page2">
                <Storyboard>
                    <DoubleAnimation Duration="0" To="640" Storyboard.TargetProperty="(FrameworkElement.Width)" Storyboard.TargetName="grid2" d:IsOptimized="True"/>
                    <DoubleAnimation Duration="0" To="480" Storyboard.TargetProperty="(FrameworkElement.Height)" Storyboard.TargetName="grid2" d:IsOptimized="True"/>
                </Storyboard>
            </VisualState>
        </VisualStateGroup>
    </VisualStateManager.VisualStateGroups>
    <Grid x:Name="grid1"  Background="Beige" Width="40" Height="40" HorizontalAlignment="Left" VerticalAlignment="Top"/>
    <Grid x:Name="grid2" HorizontalAlignment="Right" Width="40" Height="40" VerticalAlignment="Top" Background="Wheat" />
    <Grid HorizontalAlignment="Left" Width="40" Height="40" VerticalAlignment="Bottom" />
    <Grid HorizontalAlignment="Right" Width="40" Height="40" VerticalAlignment="Bottom"/>
    <StackPanel HorizontalAlignment="Center">
        <Button Content="Reset" >
            <i:Interaction.Triggers>
                <i:EventTrigger EventName="Click">
                    <ei:GoToStateAction StateName="None"/>
                </i:EventTrigger>
            </i:Interaction.Triggers>
        </Button>
        <Button Content="Page1" >
            <i:Interaction.Triggers>
                <i:EventTrigger EventName="Click">
                    <ei:GoToStateAction StateName="Page1"/>
                </i:EventTrigger>
            </i:Interaction.Triggers>
        </Button>
        <Button Content="Page2" >
            <i:Interaction.Triggers>
                <i:EventTrigger EventName="Click">
                    <ei:GoToStateAction StateName="Page2"/>
                </i:EventTrigger>
            </i:Interaction.Triggers>
        </Button>
    </StackPanel>
</Grid>

2
  • Yeah, I tried that, but unfortunately for generated transitions Silverlight starts transitioning all the properties at the same time. I need to visible panel to shrink down to nothing, by scaling its X and Y transform to zero, and THEN for the new panel to appear in the reverse way.
    – Jon Rimmer
    Mar 3, 2011 at 15:56
  • Aha! That works, thank you very much! I had a bit of trouble at first, because I was setting the visibility to collapsed for each grid, as well as fading it out, but the generated transition applies the change immediately so you don't see it shrink. If I leave it visible, but shrunk and with opacity zero, things look right. Thanks again!
    – Jon Rimmer
    Mar 3, 2011 at 20:33

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