I've read about that technique, but it's not one that I've used or that I think is commonly used. Normally I would use DelegateCommand from Prism, or RelayCommand from MVVM light. These implement ICommand which has the CanExecuteChanged event. You are then responsible for raising this event when the state of your view model changes, e.g.
public class MyViewModel
{
DelegateCommand _myCommand;
public MyViewModel()
{
_myCommand = new DelegateCommand(ExecuteMyCommand, CanExecuteMyCommand);
}
public ICommand MyCommand
{
get{ return _myCommand; }
}
private void ExecuteMyCommand(){ ... }
private bool CanExecuteMyCommand() { return true/false; }
// for example
public int SomeProperty
{
get{ ... }
set{
...;
if( ... ){
_myCommand.RaiseCanExecuteChanged();
}
}
}
}
Not quite what you were after, but I hope it helps.
Application.Current.Dispatcher.Invoke?
stackoverflow.com/a/15828850