4

I have a checkbox with its IsChecked property bound to a nullable bool. When my control first loads the value is null and the checkbox appears greyed out. This is what I want.

When the user clicks the checkbox, it moves to the false/Unchecked state.

However, 99% of the time the user is going to want to tick the checkbox - which currently means double clicking the checkbox.

How can I make the value move from null to true when the user first clicks the checkbox?

5 Answers 5

9

I had the same problem and ran into this question. This is a late response but I think this is the best solution :)

With the help of IsThreeState and TargetNullValue you can accomplish this

 <CheckBox  IsThreeState="False" IsChecked="{Binding YOUR_NULLABLE_PROPERTY, TargetNullValue=false}" />

The only caveat is that it will toggle between null and true. There will never be a false value.

6

You can just modify the setter of the bound property to check whether the previous value is null and if it is, set the value to true. Something like this:

public bool? MyBoolProperty 
{
   get { return _myBoolProperty; }
   set 
   {
       _myBoolProperty = (_myBoolProperty != null || value == null) ? value : true;
       RaisePropertyChanged("MyBoolProperty");       
   }
}

The binding system will re-read the property after it sets it, so the new value will be reflected by the CheckBox.

1
  • 1
    This will affect code trying to set the property as well, which is fairly dodgy.
    – Miral
    Sep 18, 2012 at 1:14
3

You can handle the Click event and implement a logic like this:

private void CheckBox_Click(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
  CheckBox cb = sender as CheckBox;

  switch (cb.IsChecked) 
  {
    case null:
      cb.IsChecked = false;
      break;

    case true:
      cb.IsChecked = true;
      break;

    case false:
      if (cb.IsThreeState) {
        cb.IsChecked = null;
      } else {
        cb.IsChecked = true;
      }
      break;
  }

  e.Handled = true;

}
1

I have met this problem recently. I look all answers of this question, but none seem fit me. The accepted answer is fail when I set IsChecked equals false in ViewModel. I decompile the checkbox in wpf. As you can see, when you click a null IsChecked checkbox, IsChecked property will switch to false.

protected internal virtual void OnToggle()
{
    bool? flag;
    if (this.IsChecked == true)
    {
        flag = (this.IsThreeState ? null : new bool?(false));
    }
    else
    {
        flag = new bool?(this.IsChecked.HasValue);
    }
    base.SetCurrentValueInternal(ToggleButton.IsCheckedProperty, flag);
}

So you can Create a new class inherit CheckBox and override OnToggle method like this:

protected override void OnToggle()
{
   bool? flag;
   if (this.IsChecked == true)
   {
       flag = this.IsThreeState ? null : new bool?(false);
   }
   else 
       flag = true;
   // what a pity this method is internal
   // actually you can call this method by reflection
   base.SetCurrentValueInternal(ToggleButton.IsCheckedProperty, flag);
}

The other way is:

protected override void OnToggle()
{
    if (this.IsChecked == null)
        this.IsChecked = false;
    base.OnToggle();
}
0

The easiest way would be to simply handle the click event and set the control to true if its current state is null, optionally setting a flag for your internal code tracking after first click.

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.