3

For my WPF application I'm using MVVM, and now I want to show a generated context menu when the user right-clicks on something.
Routing the right-click to some action was easy, but how do I show a contextmenu which items are generated by the ViewModel?

I don't even have an idea where to start to display a context menu, since I do not have direct access to the view in MVVM.

3 Answers 3

3

Apologies for the delay in replying, had to have a bit of an experiment to get it to work. Give the following code a go. I just set up my own rubbish data source just so I could display some sort of data. It only displays if I right click over the first column heading and no where else... which I think is what you want, right? Let me know how you get on...any probs will continue to have a think.

   <Grid>
    <ListView Margin="8,8,33,12"  ItemsSource="{Binding Source={StaticResource Stuff}, Path=MyCollection}">
        <ListView.View>
        <GridView>
                <GridViewColumn Width="100" DisplayMemberBinding="{Binding}">
                    <GridViewColumnHeader>ProductName
                        <GridViewColumnHeader.ContextMenu>
                            <ContextMenu Name="MyMenu">
                                <MenuItem Header="Sort by..."/>
                                <MenuItem Header="Follow link..."/>
                            </ContextMenu>
                        </GridViewColumnHeader.ContextMenu>
                    </GridViewColumnHeader>
                </GridViewColumn>
                <GridViewColumn Width="100" Header="Product Name" DisplayMemberBinding="{Binding Path=Length}"/>
        </GridView>
        </ListView.View>
    </ListView>
</Grid>
3

If, for example, you wanted to show a ContextMenu over a DataGrid that maybe showed sales you could do this:

            <y:DataGrid.ContextMenu>
            <ContextMenu>
                <MenuItem Name="cmNewSales" Foreground="Black" Command={Binding Path=MyCommand}/>


            </ContextMenu>
        </y:DataGrid.ContextMenu>

where the MyCommand is a Command property exposed by the ViewModel, or create an ObservableCollection of commands in the ViewModel, which are exposed and bound to in the ItemSource property of the ContextMenu.

Hope that helps

3
  • In my case I want the ContextMenu to be attached to the header items of a GridView in a ListView - any ideas where to put the ContextMenu in that case (I don't want the ContextMenu to be everywhere in the ListView, just the header)?
    – Sam
    Jul 20, 2010 at 8:56
  • Hi Sam, just answered as a new 'answer' so that the code would format ok. See below. Jul 20, 2010 at 11:12
  • I think this is the better answer as this moves the responsibility of the display of the menu into the view while keeping the execution of the logic for the menu items into the VM. It also means the menu items can be rearranged, removed, altered etc.. without the VM being involved since the presentation is all in the XAML Feb 19, 2014 at 0:52
0

The off-the-top-of-my-head answer would be to have a list of commands (corresponding to the items in your context menu) in the VM. Bind the ContextMenu's ItemSource to the VM.ListOfCommands. Use Styles as per taste.

Here's an example on the same lines... http://www.julmar.com/blog/mark/2009/04/21/UsingMVVMWithMenusInWPF.aspx

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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