Suppose you have a window with multiple buttons such as Ok/Cancel or Yes/No/Cancel. All the buttons need to be the same width. Obviously this could be done by just guessing a number and hardwiring all of them to that number.

Is there a better way to do it, one that would take into account preferred/recommended sizes (just how wide should an Ok button be anyway? This is not a rhetorical question, I actually don't know the answer!), what's needed by the text of the longest caption, what happens if the font size is increased etc?

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Please try not to hardcode UI size and such. It's bad practice when taking into account internationalization and (to a lesser extent now that WPF uses 'resolution independent units') various size and DPI screens. We have layout panels available to us to use. They're good. – Benny Jobigan Apr 17 '10 at 14:25
Buttons are supposed to be 50dlu x 23dlu. WPF doesn't support dialog units; so you're pretty much stuck. – Ian Boyd Aug 21 '11 at 3:50
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5 Answers

up vote 3 down vote accepted

There are several ways to do this:

1) Use a Grid for layout. Each Button gets its own Column, which is Star-sized. That way, all columns are the same size:

<Grid>
    <Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
        <ColumnDefinition Width="*" />
        <ColumnDefinition Width="*" />
        <ColumnDefinition Width="*" />
    </Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
    <Button Grid.Column="0">Yes</Button>
    <Button Grid.Column="1">No</Button>
    <Button Grid.Column="2">Cancel</Button>
</Grid>

2) You can have one item as "master size" and bind the width of all others to this item's width.

<StackPanel Orientation="Horizontal">
    <Button Name="MasterButton" Width="100">Yes</Button>
    <Button>
        <Button.Width>
            <Binding ElementName="MasterButton" Path="Width"/>
        </Button.Width>
        No
    </Button>
</StackPanel>

EDIT: In actual code, you probably will have Width="Auto". Since the other widths are based on the "master width", the button with the widest width (widest text) should be chosen.

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+1 for recommending using panels in your first suggestion, but I'm really against hardcoding UI sizes. – Benny Jobigan Apr 17 '10 at 14:27
In the second case this was for demonstration that the binding is working. – Daniel Rose Apr 17 '10 at 14:34
2  
Wouldn't a uniform grid be a good solution too? – henon Sep 23 '11 at 9:20
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According to the MS User Experience Interaction Guidelines for Windows 7 and Windows Vista (p61), standard dimensions for command buttons are 50x14 DLU actual size (75x23 pixels). The guidelines further suggest you "try to work with [these] default widths and heights." Obviously, if you need more width to fit a clear label, then take more width.

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Buttons are supposed to be 50x14 dialog units. Your conversion to pixels is wrong; at least on my computer where i use Georgia 14pt. That is why dialog units exist - so people stop using pixel sizes. – Ian Boyd Aug 21 '11 at 3:50
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Use a "master" control, like in Daniel's answer, but bind to the "ActualWidth" attribute instead of "Width":

<StackPanel Orientation="Horizontal">
    <Button Name="MasterButton">Yes</Button>
    <Button>
        <Button.Width>
            <Binding ElementName="MasterButton" Path="ActualWidth"/>
        </Button.Width>
        No
    </Button>
</StackPanel>

This way, the value is taken from the master control at run time, after minimum and maximum width and all other layout calculations have been taken into account. Binding to "Width" binds to whatever you happen to put into the attribute at compile time, which may not be the width that is really used.

Also, the binding can be written shorter like

<Button Width="{Binding ElementName=MasterButton, Path=ActualWidth}"/>
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In the most general case, you want to create a Style in your section, then apply this style as desired. Now when you change the style, all buttons change.

Or you can change the Content of the button so that it autosizes to the text.

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Thanks. But, correct me if I'm wrong, but wouldn't making a button autosize to the text, break the requirement that all buttons be the same width? And, isn't the style solution, just a particular way of implementing 'guess a number and hardwire all the buttons to that number'? – rwallace Apr 17 '10 at 13:54
Ah... I understand your requirement now, sorry! Daniel has a much better answer, then. – Dave Apr 17 '10 at 14:16
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Another, perhaps simpler, way to do this is to use the SharedSizeGroup property on the ColumnDefinition and RowDefinition classes.

Columns (and Rows) in a WPF Grid can automatically resize to fit their contents - when SharedSizeGroup is used, columns with the same group name share their resizing logic.

The Xaml would look something like this ...

<Grid Grid.IsSharedSizeScope="True">

    <Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
        <ColumnDefinition Width="*" />
        <ColumnDefinition SharedSizeGroup="Buttons" />
        <ColumnDefinition SharedSizeGroup="Buttons" />
        <ColumnDefinition SharedSizeGroup="Buttons" />
    </Grid.ColumnDefinitions>

    <Grid.RowDefinitions>
        <RowDefinition Height="Auto" />
        <RowDefinition Height="*" />
    </Grid.RowDefinitions>

    <Button Grid.Column="1"
            HorizontalAlignment="Stretch"
            VerticalAlignment="Center"
            Content="Ok"
            Margin="4" />

    <Button Grid.Column="2"
            HorizontalAlignment="Stretch"
            VerticalAlignment="Center"
            Content="Cancel"
            Margin="4" />

    <Button Grid.Column="3"
            HorizontalAlignment="Stretch"
            VerticalAlignment="Center"
            Content="Long Button Caption"
            Margin="4" />
</Grid>
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