In my WPF application I have this:

<StackPanel>
  <TextBlock>
     <Hyperlink>
       <TextBlock TextWrapping="Wrap" Name="HyperlinkText" />
     </Hyperlink>
  </TextBlock>
</StackPanel>

But if I set HyperlinkText.Text to a long text that wraps, the whole text is underlined only once at the bottom (see image). Is there a way to have every line underlined separately without manual wrapping?

link

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3 Answers

up vote 3 down vote accepted

An easier way to achieve that is to use Run instead of TextBlock.

Hope it helps.

link
Thanks, that works too and is much simpler. (I had to move the TextWrapping="Wrap" from the inner TextBlock to the outer one.) – svick Nov 25 '09 at 20:48
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This is a really, really annoying problem in WPF. I'd go so far as to call it a bug.

As @levanovd mentioned in his answer, you can get a hyperlink to wrap properly by using a Run as the inner element:

    <StackPanel>
        <TextBlock TextWrapping="Wrap">
            <Hyperlink><Run>This is a really long hyperlink. Yeah, a really really long hyperlink, whaddaya think?</Run></Hyperlink>
        </TextBlock>
    </StackPanel>

This works great, until you want to apply text formatting within the hyperlink. If you tried to do this, for example:

    <StackPanel>
        <TextBlock TextWrapping="Wrap">
            <Hyperlink><Run>This is a really long <Run TextWeight="Bold">hyperlink</Run>. Yeah, a really really long hyperlink, whaddaya think?</Run></Hyperlink>
        </TextBlock>
    </StackPanel>

You'd get a compile error:

The object 'Run' already has a child and cannot add ''. 'Run' can accept only one child.

So, as @Scott Whitlock noted, you have to use a TextBlock as the inner element and mess around with the TextDecoration attributes of the Hyperlink and TextBlock instead:

    <StackPanel>
        <TextBlock>
            <Hyperlink TextDecorations="None"><TextBlock TextWrapping="Wrap" TextDecorations="Underline">This is a really long <Run FontWeight="Bold">hyperlink</Run>. Yeah, a really really long hyperlink, whaddaya think?</TextBlock></Hyperlink>
        </TextBlock>
    </StackPanel>

Sigh. I really hate WPF's Hyperlink element. It just doesn't work anything like you'd expect.

link
Nice answer! Well summarized! – Vincent Nov 11 '10 at 20:23
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Try changing the style of the Hyperlink to remove the underline. Then add an underline to the inner TextBlock style itself.

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Care to post some code? I would like to try this but not sure how to remove the underline without breaking the rest of the style. And I'm lazy :-) – skypecakes Sep 2 '10 at 23:30
@skypecakes: levanovd's answer is better. See this for more info: longhorncorner.com/UploadFile/raj1979/TextWPF01062009041311AM/… – Scott Whitlock Sep 3 '10 at 1:43
Thanks, Scott. That looked promising, but unfortunately won't work for me because I am populating the text with a data binding and on .Net 3.5. You can't bind Run.Text in 3.5. I am less lazy today so I'll see what I can come up with and post the results as an answer to the OP's question, if it's good enough. – skypecakes Sep 7 '10 at 18:34
@skypecakes: There are lots of attached property examples out there that you can use to bind non-bindable properties directly in xaml. – Scott Whitlock Sep 8 '10 at 12:22
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