vote up 55 vote down star
51

Here is a large number of hidden features discussed for variety of languages. Now I am curious about some hidden features of XAML and WPF?

One I have found is the header click event of a ListView

<ListView x:Name='lv' 
      Height="150" 
      GridViewColumnHeader.Click="GridViewColumnHeaderClickedHandler">

The GridViewColumnHeader.Click property is not listed.

Some of relevant features so far:

See also:

  1. Hidden features of C#
  2. Hidden features of Python
  3. Hidden features of ASP.NET
  4. Hidden features of Perl
  5. Hidden features of Java
  6. Hidden features of VB.NET
  7. Hidden features of PHP
  8. Hidden features of Ruby
  9. Hidden features of C
  10. And So On........
flag
3  
Have a look here msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/… . The click event is inherited from ButtonBase. What you are describing are attached Events, a pretty powerfull concept in WPF (msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/…). This way you can do <Grid Button.Click> with 100 buttons on a grid and only 1 handler. – Sorskoot Jul 14 at 11:48
At first I was like "oh, here we go again," but then I learned something in the responses so I take it all back :o :o – 280Z28 Jul 22 at 11:11
1  
should be community wiki – tsilb Sep 7 at 7:22
1  
@tsilb I don't think it should be community wiki, have look at this link meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/392/… – Prashant Sep 7 at 12:29

20 Answers

vote up 26 vote down

Multibinding (combined with StringFormat):

<TextBlock>
  <TextBlock.Text>
    <MultiBinding StringFormat="{}{0}, {1}">
      <Binding Path="LastName" />
      <Binding Path="FirstName" />
    </MultiBinding>
  </TextBlock.Text>
</TextBlock>
link|flag
1  
lol I just wish I knew about this loooong before =P – Carlo Jul 14 at 20:32
vote up 22 vote down

There is also PresentationTraceSources.TraceLevel trick to debug what is going on with bindings in any particular scenario. All you have to do is to reference System.Diagnostics namespace in WindowsBase assembly

xmlns:sd="clr-namespace:System.Diagnostics;assembly=WindowsBase"

and then add following to the binding expression:

<TextBlock Text="{Binding Message, sd:PresentationTraceSources.TraceLevel=High}"  />

Log will be like this:

System.Windows.Data Warning: 52 : Created BindingExpression (hash=5923895) for Binding (hash=7588182)
System.Windows.Data Warning: 54 :   Path: 'Message'
System.Windows.Data Warning: 56 : BindingExpression (hash=5923895): Default mode resolved to OneWay
System.Windows.Data Warning: 57 : BindingExpression (hash=5923895): Default update trigger resolved to PropertyChanged
System.Windows.Data Warning: 58 : BindingExpression (hash=5923895): Attach to System.Windows.Controls.TextBlock.Text (hash=65248697)
System.Windows.Data Warning: 63 : BindingExpression (hash=5923895): Resolving source
link|flag
vote up 14 vote down

3.5sp1 introduced StringFormat into binding expressions, e.g.

<TextBox Text="{Binding Date, StringFormat='{}{0:MM/dd/yyyy}'}" />
link|flag
I can't put into words just how much I love that feature. I hated having tons of value converters laying around. – unforgiven3 Jul 14 at 13:53
Yeah, easily one of the most time saving features added. Especially when combined with TargetNullValue a lot of problems go away. – Bryan Anderson Jul 14 at 14:03
6  
Putting single quotes around the StringFormat should remove some compiler warnings - Text={Binding Date, StringFormat='{}{0:MM/dd/yyyy}'}" – Ryan Versaw Jul 14 at 14:21
Good to know, I've gotten used to just ignoring them. – Bryan Anderson Jul 14 at 14:30
Will it work for Silverlight – Prashant Sep 29 at 12:47
vote up 11 vote down

3.5sp1 introduced TargetNullValue to bindings. This will set the bound property to Null if the value is entered and if your property is Null it will display this value.

<TextBox Text="{Binding Total, TargetNullValue=$0.00}" />
link|flag
vote up 10 vote down

Not really a hidden feature but with WPF/XAML you get Bea Stollnitz and Josh Smith. Queen and King of WPF/XAML programming.

link|flag
1  
Don't forget karlshifflett.wordpress.com – qntmfred Jul 27 at 3:49
+1 for humor. Nice. – cplotts Sep 25 at 14:42
vote up 5 vote down

Adding Aero effect to Window

  <Window.Resources>
    <ResourceDictionary Source="/PresentationFramework.Aero, Version=3.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, 
        PublicKeyToken=31bf3856ad364e35, ProcessorArchitecture=MSIL;component/themes/aero.normalcolor.xaml" />
</Window.Resources>
link|flag
vote up 4 vote down

Markup extensions and attached properties are my favorite features, they enable you to extend XAML "vocabulary" in a very elegant way.

Markup extensions

<!-- Binding to app settings -->
<CheckBox IsChecked="{my:SettingBinding MinimizeToTray}">Close to tray</CheckBox>

<!-- Fill ItemsControl with the values of an enum -->
<ComboBox ItemsSource="{my:EnumValues sys:DaysOfWeek}"/>

<!-- Localization -->
<TextBlock Text="{my:Localize HelloWorld.Text}"/>

<!-- Switch on the result of a binding -->
<TextBlock Text="{my:Switch Path=IsGood, ValueIfTrue=Good, ValueIfFalse=Bad}"/>

Attached properties

<!-- Sort GridView automatically -->
<ListView ItemsSource="{Binding Persons}"
      IsSynchronizedWithCurrentItem="True"
      util:GridViewSort.AutoSort="True">
    <ListView.View>
        <GridView>
            <GridView.Columns>
                <GridViewColumn Header="Name"
                                DisplayMemberBinding="{Binding Name}"
                                util:GridViewSort.PropertyName="Name"/>
                <GridViewColumn Header="First name"
                                DisplayMemberBinding="{Binding FirstName}"
                                util:GridViewSort.PropertyName="FirstName"/>
                <GridViewColumn Header="Date of birth"
                                DisplayMemberBinding="{Binding DateOfBirth}"
                                util:GridViewSort.PropertyName="DateOfBirth"/>
            </GridView.Columns>
        </GridView>
    </ListView.View>
</ListView>


<!-- Vista Glass effect -->
<Window x:Class="WpfApplication1.Window1"
        xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"
        xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml"
        xmlns:my="clr-namespace:WpfApplication1"
        Title="Window1"
        my:WinUtil.EnableAeroGlass="True">

...

Source for GridViewSort (btw, it uses the GridViewColumnHeader.Click event mentioned by Ortus)

link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

Grid size sharing (here's a good example). Long story short you can have grid columns and rows share sizes, even across different grids. This will be invaluable for all the people out there who are using DataGrids without the need to edit the data in place.

link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

Show Tooltip on a disabled control

Wpf allows to show tooltip on a control, if it is in disabled state.

For example

<Button Content="Disabled Button" ToolTipService.ShowOnDisabled="True" IsEnabled="False" ToolTip="This is a disabled button"/>
link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

Use of Static Factory Methods with x:FactoryMethod

When you have a type that has no public constructor but a static factory method you had to create that type in code in XAML 2006. With XAML 2009 you can use the x:FactoryMethodx:Arguments attribute to pass the argument values.

<!-- XAML 2006 -->
Guid id = Guid.NewGuid();

<!-- XAML 2009 -->
<Guid x:FactoryMethod="Guid.NewGuid" />
link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

Advanced "caption" properties

Another thing that is not very clear is the contents of some properties that we are used to contains only text. If the property of a GUI element is of type Object, it is very likely that you can, instead of just setting the text, add a panel of your need that includes a set of controls.

An example of this is the MenuItem, where the Header property (which normally just contains text) can contain a set of gui elements wrapped in a panel control (or just one gui element if you need just one).

Also note the Icon property on the MenuItem. This normally contains an Image element, but this also can contain anything!

<MenuItem Name="MyMenuItem" Click="MyMenuItem_Click">
  <MenuItem.Icon>
    <Button Click="Button1_Click">i</Button>
  </MenuItem.Icon>
  <MenuItem.Header>
     <StackPanel Orientation="Horizontal" >
        <Label>My text</Label>
        <Button Click="Button2_Click">ClickMe!</Button>
     </StackPanel>
  </MenuItem.Header>
</MenuItem>
link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

Support for Arbitrary Dictionary Keys

In XAML 2006 all explicit x:Key value were threated as strings. In XAML 2009 you can define any type of key you like by writing the key in ElementSyntax.

<!-- XAML 2006 -->
<StreamGeometry x:Key="CheckGeometry">M 0 0 L 12 8 l 9 12 z</StreamGeometry>

<!-- XAML 2009 -->
<StreamGeometry>M 0 0 L 12 8 l 9 12 z
    <x:Key><x:Double>10.0</x:Double></x:Key>
</StreamGeometry>
link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Sometime you get string that is too long to show on label in that case we can make use of TextTrimming property of TextBlock to show Ellipses

MSDN Link

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Generics in XAML with x:TypeArguments

If you want to use an ObservableCollection in XAML you need to create a type that derives from ObservableCollection because you cannot declare it in XAML. With XAML 2009 you can use the x:TypeArguments attribute to define the type of a generic type.

<!-- XAML 2006 -->
class EmployeeCollection : ObservableCollection<Employee>
{
}

<l:EmployeeCollection>
    <l:Employee FirstName="John" Name="Doe" />
    <l:Employee FirstName="Tim" Name="Smith" />
</lEmployeeCollection>

<!-- XAML 2009 -->
<ObservableCollection x:TypeArguments="Employee">
    <l:Employee FirstName="John" Name="Doe" />
    <l:Employee FirstName="Tim" Name="Smith" />
</ObservableCollection />
link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

XAML Converters

The following list shows converters developed by the WPF community to convert different formats to XAML or vice versa.

Adobe Illustrator XAML Export Plugin

Adobe Photoshop to XAML Converter

Blender XAML Export Plugin

Lightwave XAML Export Plugin

Visio XAML Export

3D Studio Max to XAML Converter

Maya to XAML Converter

Flash to XAML Converter

SVG to XAML Converter

WMF/EMF to XAML Converter

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Built-in Types

If you want to add objects of simple types like string or double to a resource dictionary today you need to map the needed clr-namespaces to an XML namespaces. In XAML 2009 we a lot of simple types that are included in the XAML language.

<!-- XAML 2006 -->
<sys:String xmlns:sys="clr-namespace:System;assembly=mscorlib >Test</sys:String>

<!-- XAML 2009 -->
<x:String>Test</x:String>

The following types are included into the XAML language:

<x:Object/> 
<x:Boolean/> 
<x:Char/> 
<x:String/> 
<x:Decimal/> 
<x:Single/> 
<x:Double/> 
<x:Int16/> 
<x:Int32/> 
<x:Int64/> 
<x:TimeSpan/> 
<x:Uri/> 
<x:Byte/> 
<x:Array/> 
<x:List/> 
<x:Dictionary/>
link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Easy Object References with {x:Reference}

If you want to create an object reference today you need to do a databinding and declare the source with an ElementName. In XAML 2009 you can use the new {x:Reference} markup extension

<!-- XAML 2006 -->
<Label Target="{Binding ElementName=firstName}">FirstName</Label>
<TextBox x:Name="firstName" />

<!-- XAML 2009 -->
<Label Target="{x:Reference firstName}">FirstName</Label>
<TextBox x:Name="firstName" />
link|flag
Target accepts just Target="firstName" in WPF 4.0. :) – Yogesh Nov 16 at 11:53
vote up 0 vote down

Use of Non-Default Constructors with x:Arguments

In XAML 2006 objects must have a public default constructor to use them. In XAML 2009 you can pass constructor arguments by using the x:Arguments syntax.

<!-- XAML 2006 -->
<DateTime>00:00:00.0000100</DateTime>

<!-- XAML 2009 -->
<DateTime>
    <x:Arguments>
        <x:Int64>100</x:Int64>
    </x:Arguments>
</DateTime>
link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Set a ValidationError by Code

A ValidatioRule in a BindingExpression only triggers, when the target side of the binding changes. If you want to set a validation error by code you can use the following snippet.

Set the validation error

ValidationError validationError = 
    new ValidationError(regexValidationRule, 
    textBox.GetBindingExpression(TextBox.TextProperty));

validationError.ErrorContent = "This is not a valid e-mail address";

Validation.MarkInvalid(
    textBox.GetBindingExpression(TextBox.TextProperty), 
    validationError);

Clear the validation error

Validation.ClearInvalid(textBox.GetBindingExpression(TextBox.TextProperty));
link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Debugging Animations

Common Errors

If you get the following error: Cannot animate '(0).(1)' on an immutable object instance. it could be that you are run into one of the following limitations:

  • You are animating a dependency property without setting a local value
  • You are animating a dependency property who's current value is defined in another assembly that is not merged into the resource dictionary.
  • You are animating a value that is currently databound
link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.