I'm developing a simple WPF UI for image post-processing.
I'd like to create a draggable WPF control to be used on a Canvas which would look roughly like this:
Both end points ellipses would be draggable and the line joining them would follow as the end points move.
Now, I know how to implement this by simply adding these elements into a Canvas and then implementing the necessary event handling to make the elements move as they're dragged. But that's hard to maintain if I ever want to add other types of draggable controls.
What I'd like to do would be to isolate all the handling into its own class (say DragLine), derived either from FrameworkElement or UIElement. To add this draggable UI element into a Canvas, I'd create an instance of DragLine and just add it to Canvas.Children. The rest of my program would only see DragLine instances and wouldn't need to worry about the lines or ellipses used to draw the new element.
I'd like to implement the line end points using standard shapes such as the Ellipse rather than drawing all of the UI element myself. That's because I'd like to re-use the event handling and hit testing these shapes already implement.
Question: is deriving from FrameworkElement the right way to go about this? The line and end point ellipses would then be just be visual and logical children of in my new class.
If deriving from FrameworkElement is not the recommended way, how would you go about this instead?
If it is, is there a way to simplify its implementation given that the new class would only ever be used on a Canvas (and doesn't need to work well for things like a Grid or a StackPanel)?