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I want to write a ViewModel that always knows the current state of some read-only dependency properties from the View.

Specifically, my GUI contains a FlowDocumentPageViewer, which displays one page at a time from a FlowDocument. FlowDocumentPageViewer exposes two read-only dependency properties called CanGoToPreviousPage and CanGoToNextPage. I want my ViewModel to always know the values of these two View properties.

I figured I could do this with a OneWayToSource databinding:

<FlowDocumentPageViewer
    CanGoToNextPage="{Binding NextPageAvailable, Mode=OneWayToSource}" ...>

If this was allowed, it would be perfect: whenever the FlowDocumentPageViewer's CanGoToNextPage property changed, the new value would get pushed down into the ViewModel's NextPageAvailable property, which is exactly what I want. Unfortunately, this doesn't compile: I get an error saying "'CanGoToPreviousPage' property is read-only and cannot be set from markup." Apparently read-only properties don't support any kind of databinding, not even databinding that's read-only with respect to that property.

I could make my ViewModel's properties be DependencyProperties, and make a OneWay binding going the other way, but I'm not crazy about the separation-of-concerns violation (ViewModel would need a reference to the View, which MVVM databinding is supposed to avoid).

FlowDocumentPageViewer doesn't expose a CanGoToNextPageChanged event, and I don't know of any good way to get change notifications from a DependencyProperty, short of creating another DependencyProperty to bind it to, which seems like overkill here.

How can I keep my ViewModel informed of changes to the view's read-only properties?

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2 Answers

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Yes, I've done this in the past with the ActualWidth and ActualHeight properties, both of which are read-only. I created an attached behavior that has ObservedWidth and ObservedHeight attached properties. It also has an Observe property that is used to do the initial hook-up. Usage looks like this:

<UserControl ...
    SizeObserver.Observe="True"
    SizeObserver.ObservedWidth="{Binding Width, Mode=OneWayToSource}"
    SizeObserver.ObservedHeight="{Binding Height, Mode=OneWayToSource}"

So the view model has Width and Height properties that are always in sync with the ObservedWidth and ObservedHeight attached properties. The Observe property simply attaches to the SizeChanged event of the FrameworkElement. In the handle, it updates its ObservedWidth and ObservedHeight properties. Ergo, the Width and Height of the view model is always in sync with the ActualWidth and ActualHeight of the UserControl.

Perhaps not the perfect solution (I agree - read-only DPs should support OneWayToSource bindings), but it works and it upholds the MVVM pattern. Obviously, the ObservedWidth and ObservedHeight DPs are not read-only.

HTH, Kent

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I wonder if you could do some trickery to automatically attach the properties, without needing Observe. But this looks like a fine solution. Thanks! – Joe White Jul 5 at 12:58
Thanks Kent. I posted a code sample below for this "SizeObserver" class. – Scott W. Aug 20 at 12:54
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If anyone else is interested, I coded up an approximation of Kent's solution here:

class SizeObserver
{
    #region " Observe "

    public static bool GetObserve(FrameworkElement elem)
    {
        return (bool)elem.GetValue(ObserveProperty);
    }

    public static void SetObserve(
      FrameworkElement elem, bool value)
    {
        elem.SetValue(ObserveProperty, value);
    }

    public static readonly DependencyProperty ObserveProperty =
        DependencyProperty.RegisterAttached("Observe", typeof(bool), typeof(SizeObserver),
        new UIPropertyMetadata(false, OnObserveChanged));

    static void OnObserveChanged(
      DependencyObject depObj, DependencyPropertyChangedEventArgs e)
    {
        FrameworkElement elem = depObj as FrameworkElement;
        if (elem == null)
            return;

        if (e.NewValue is bool == false)
            return;

        if ((bool)e.NewValue)
            elem.SizeChanged += OnSizeChanged;
        else
            elem.SizeChanged -= OnSizeChanged;
    }

    static void OnSizeChanged(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
    {
        if (!Object.ReferenceEquals(sender, e.OriginalSource))
            return;

        FrameworkElement elem = e.OriginalSource as FrameworkElement;
        if (elem != null)
        {
            SetObservedWidth(elem, elem.ActualWidth);
            SetObservedHeight(elem, elem.ActualHeight);
        }
    }

    #endregion

    #region " ObservedWidth "

    public static double GetObservedWidth(DependencyObject obj)
    {
        return (double)obj.GetValue(ObservedWidthProperty);
    }

    public static void SetObservedWidth(DependencyObject obj, double value)
    {
        obj.SetValue(ObservedWidthProperty, value);
    }

    // Using a DependencyProperty as the backing store for ObservedWidth.  This enables animation, styling, binding, etc...
    public static readonly DependencyProperty ObservedWidthProperty =
        DependencyProperty.RegisterAttached("ObservedWidth", typeof(double), typeof(SizeObserver), new UIPropertyMetadata(0.0));

    #endregion

    #region " ObservedHeight "

    public static double GetObservedHeight(DependencyObject obj)
    {
        return (double)obj.GetValue(ObservedHeightProperty);
    }

    public static void SetObservedHeight(DependencyObject obj, double value)
    {
        obj.SetValue(ObservedHeightProperty, value);
    }

    // Using a DependencyProperty as the backing store for ObservedHeight.  This enables animation, styling, binding, etc...
    public static readonly DependencyProperty ObservedHeightProperty =
        DependencyProperty.RegisterAttached("ObservedHeight", typeof(double), typeof(SizeObserver), new UIPropertyMetadata(0.0));

    #endregion
}

Feel free to use it in your apps. It works well. (Thanks Kent!)

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