I'm going to try the fix suggested @Jimmy Engtröm. However, I've also been able to work around this by waiting until the Load has occurred.
<controls:Pivot x:Name="pivotCtrl" Title="{Binding ApplicationTitle}"
Loaded="OnPivotControlLoaded" Opacity="1">
And in the page's code behind:
private void OnPivotControlLoaded(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
// Restore the Pivot control's SelectedIndex
if (State.ContainsKey(SelectedPivotIndexKey))
{
pivotCtrl.SelectedIndex = State.Get<int>(SelectedPivotIndexKey);
}
myStoryboard.Begin();
}
Now, why the Storyboard? Well, when you wait until Load, you will see the first pivot and that's lame. So the Storyboard does a quick fade-in...just enough to disguise the fix. I tried just setting Visibility, but that would crash the app. Also note that, for design purposes, I leave Opacity set to 1 in the pivot control's XAML. Here's the Storyboard:
<Storyboard x:Name="myStoryboard">
<DoubleAnimation
Storyboard.TargetName="pivotCtrl"
Storyboard.TargetProperty="Opacity"
From="0.0" To="1.0" Duration="0:0:01"
/>
</Storyboard>
Here are the helper functions (placed in a separate class file and referenced, e.g. using MyApp.Helpers and the class file needs to reference System.Collections.Generic)
public static T Get<T>(this IDictionary<string, object> dictionary, string key)
{
return (T)dictionary[key];
}
public static void AddOrReplace<T>(this IDictionary<string, T> dictionary, string key, T item)
{
if (dictionary.ContainsKey(key))
dictionary.Remove(key);
dictionary.Add(key, item);
}
Again, it's not the greatest fix but it works alright and the fade-in is actually something I might employ elsewhere.