34

The basic idea behind a Cancel button is to enable closing your window with an Escape Keypress.

You can set the IsCancel property on the Cancel button to true, causing the Cancel button to automatically close the dialog without handling the Click event.

Source: Programming WPF (Griffith, Sells)

So this should work

<Window>
<Button Name="btnCancel" IsCancel="True">_Close</Button>
</Window>

However the behavior I expect isn't working out for me. The parent window is the main application window specified by the Application.StartupUri property. What works is

<Button Name="btnCancel" IsCancel=True" Click="CloseWindow">_Close</Button>

private void CloseWindow(object sender, RoutedEventArgs) 
{
    this.Close();
}
  • Is the behavior of IsCancel different based on whether the Window is a normal window or a Dialog? Does IsCancel work as advertised only if ShowDialog has been called?
  • Is an explicit Click handler required for the button (with IsCancel set to true) to close a window on an Escape press?

4 Answers 4

35

Yes, it only works on dialogs as a normal window has no concept of "cancelling", it's the same as DialogResult.Cancel returning from ShowDialog in WinForms.

If you wanted to close a Window with escape you could add a handler to PreviewKeyDown on the window, pickup on whether it is Key.Escape and close the form:

public MainWindow()
{
    InitializeComponent();

    this.PreviewKeyDown += new KeyEventHandler(CloseOnEscape);
}

private void CloseOnEscape(object sender, KeyEventArgs e)
{
    if (e.Key == Key.Escape)
        Close();
}
17

We can take Steve's answer one step further and create an attached property that provides the "escape on close" functionality for any window. Write the property once and use it in any window. Just add the following to the window XAML:

yournamespace:WindowService.EscapeClosesWindow="True"

Here's the code for the property:

using System.Windows;
using System.Windows.Input;

/// <summary>
/// Attached behavior that keeps the window on the screen
/// </summary>
public static class WindowService
{
   /// <summary>
   /// KeepOnScreen Attached Dependency Property
   /// </summary>
   public static readonly DependencyProperty EscapeClosesWindowProperty = DependencyProperty.RegisterAttached(
      "EscapeClosesWindow",
      typeof(bool),
      typeof(WindowService),
      new FrameworkPropertyMetadata(false, new PropertyChangedCallback(OnEscapeClosesWindowChanged)));

   /// <summary>
   /// Gets the EscapeClosesWindow property.  This dependency property 
   /// indicates whether or not the escape key closes the window.
   /// </summary>
   /// <param name="d"><see cref="DependencyObject"/> to get the property from</param>
   /// <returns>The value of the EscapeClosesWindow property</returns>
   public static bool GetEscapeClosesWindow(DependencyObject d)
   {
      return (bool)d.GetValue(EscapeClosesWindowProperty);
   }

   /// <summary>
   /// Sets the EscapeClosesWindow property.  This dependency property 
   /// indicates whether or not the escape key closes the window.
   /// </summary>
   /// <param name="d"><see cref="DependencyObject"/> to set the property on</param>
   /// <param name="value">value of the property</param>
   public static void SetEscapeClosesWindow(DependencyObject d, bool value)
   {
      d.SetValue(EscapeClosesWindowProperty, value);
   }

   /// <summary>
   /// Handles changes to the EscapeClosesWindow property.
   /// </summary>
   /// <param name="d"><see cref="DependencyObject"/> that fired the event</param>
   /// <param name="e">A <see cref="DependencyPropertyChangedEventArgs"/> that contains the event data.</param>
   private static void OnEscapeClosesWindowChanged(DependencyObject d, DependencyPropertyChangedEventArgs e)
   {
      Window target = (Window)d;
      if (target != null)
      {
         target.PreviewKeyDown += new System.Windows.Input.KeyEventHandler(Window_PreviewKeyDown);
      }
   }

   /// <summary>
   /// Handle the PreviewKeyDown event on the window
   /// </summary>
   /// <param name="sender">The source of the event.</param>
   /// <param name="e">A <see cref="KeyEventArgs"/> that contains the event data.</param>
   private static void Window_PreviewKeyDown(object sender, KeyEventArgs e)
   {
      Window target = (Window)sender;

      // If this is the escape key, close the window
      if (e.Key == Key.Escape)
         target.Close();
   }
}
2
  • 3
    Yes. Attached properties still don't 'click' instantly in my head.
    – Gishu
    Feb 5, 2009 at 8:35
  • Works great, the only thing is that I had to replace casting to Window and add one more check for null as suggested here - stackoverflow.com/questions/10206742/…, to avoid error "Unable to cast object of type 'Microsoft.Expression.Platform.WPF.InstanceBuilders.WindowInstance' to type 'System.Windows.Window'" (project was able to build successfully, but errors were annoying. That's for my VS 2012 + R#. Also I had to restart VS after that.
    – sarh
    Feb 12, 2015 at 22:21
6

This isn't quite right is it... MSDN says this: When you set the IsCancel property of a button to true, you create a Button that is registered with the AccessKeyManager. The button is then activated when a user presses the ESC key. So you do need a handler in your code behind And you don't need any attached properties or anything like that

1
3

Yes this is right.In windows Application in WPF AcceptButton and Cancel Button is there. But one thing is that if you are setting your control visibility as false, then it won't work as expected.For that you need to make as visibility as true in WPF. For example: (it is not working for Cancel button because here visibility is false)

<Button x:Name="btnClose" Content="Close" IsCancel="True" Click="btnClose_Click" Visibility="Hidden"></Button> 

So, you need make it:

<Button x:Name="btnClose" Content="Close" IsCancel="True" Click="btnClose_Click"></Button>

Then you have write btnClose_Click in code behind file:

private void btnClose_Click (object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
    { this.Close(); }

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.