The problem with naming the XAML
root element is that, if you get into the habit of using the same name (i.e, "_this", "Root", etc.) for all the roots in your project, then late-binding in nested templates may access the wrong element. This is because, when {Binding}
ElementName=...
is used in a Template
, names are resolved at runtime by walking up the NameScope
tree until the first match is found.
Clint's solution avoids naming the root element, but it sets the root element into its own DataContext
, which might not be an option if the DataContext is needed for, say, data. It also seems a bit heavy-handed to introduce another binding on an element just for the purpose of providing access to it. Later, if access is no longer needed, that {Binding}
will become clutter: responsibility for access properly belongs with the target and binding.
Accordingly, here is a simple markup extension to access the XAML root element without naming it:
using System.Xaml;
using System.Windows.Markup;
public sealed class XamlRootExtension : MarkupExtension
{
public override Object ProvideValue(IServiceProvider sp)
{
var rop = sp.GetService(typeof(IRootObjectProvider)) as IRootObjectProvider;
return rop == null ? null : rop.RootObject;
}
};
XAML:
<Window x:Class="MainWindow"
xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"
xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml"
xmlns:global="clr-namespace:">
<TextBlock Text="{Binding Source={global:XamlRoot},Mode=OneTime}" />
</Window>
note: for clarity, I didn't define the MarkupExtension
in a namespace; using an empty clr-namespace
alias as shown here d̲o̲e̲s̲ actually work in for accessing the global::
namespace (although the VS2013 designer seems to complains about it).
Result:
A window whose content is bound to itself.
n.b.