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Can i bind to the name property? This does not seem to work:

<TextBlock Name="FordPerfect" Text="{Binding Path=Name, Mode=OneWay}"/>

Am i doing something wrong?

Edit:
Adding ElementName=FordPerfect" solved the issue. What i don't understand is why only binding to Name required this while other properties don't.

Note: Moved the second (design) issue to another question (where i should have placed in the first time...)

Thanks

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  • 1
    It should work. Have you set the DataContext of the element/object correctly? Or have you set it at all?
    – grizzly
    Mar 21, 2011 at 11:08
  • If i use a different property (e.g. Margin) it works... Mar 21, 2011 at 11:22
  • Hi! Added a new answer which may be a better fit than the accepted one since that relies on specifying the element name. Using a RelativeSource with a type of 'Self' achieves the same thing but cleaner, and in a more reusable manner as it can also be used in styles should it need to be. Jan 21, 2017 at 6:18

3 Answers 3

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I would try this :

<TextBlock Name="FordPerfect" 
 Text="{Binding ElementName=FordPerfect, Path=Name, Converter={StaticResource conv}, Mode=OneWay}"/>

This way, your TextBlock will be the context of the binding. If it does not work, watch the Output window, you should find a binding error !

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  • I'm surprise it worked in the first place with other properties. Basically, Binding need a source. Either you explicitly fix the source or elementName, or you fix the DataContext. Mar 21, 2011 at 11:41
  • Here is a good start for an overview of binding : msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms752347.aspx Mar 21, 2011 at 11:43
  • About differences between DataContext and Source : beacosta.com/blog/?p=6 Mar 21, 2011 at 11:46
  • What is this Converter named conv? Why can't we just simply bind via the name. All I want is <Something1 Name="Thing1" /> <Something2 Width="{Binding ElementName=Thing1, Path=ActualWidth}" />
    – Skystrider
    Jul 14, 2016 at 14:53
  • You may use a converter when the type does not corrrespond. When you need a cast, or a calculation. I don't know why I suggested a converter here, since it's a string put a string property Jul 16, 2016 at 7:32
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you could have more easily done this:

<TextBlock Name="FordPerfect" 
           Text="{Binding Name, Converter={StaticResource conv}, Mode=OneWay, RelativeSource={RelativeSource Self}}"/>

As to why: that textbox' DataContext is not automatically the TextBox itself. So binding to Name tries to bind to whateverObjectInDataContext.Name. So either you set the DataContext beforehand like:

<TextBlock Name="FordPerfect" DataContext={Binding RelativeSource={RelativeSource Self}} 
           Text="{Binding Name, Converter={StaticResource conv}, Mode=OneWay}"/>

... or directly set a Source for the Binding

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The issue you're having is a Binding, by default, uses the DataContext of the element it's used on as its source. However you want the binding source to be the TextBlock element itself.

WPF has a class called RelativeSource which, as its name implies, sets the source relative to the binding. One of the relations you can choose is Self which does exactly what you want: sets the source of the binding to the element it's used on.

Here's the code:

<TextBlock Name="FordPerfect" Text="{Binding Name, RelativeSource={RelativeSource Self}}" />

Since you're already setting the source with RelativeSource, you don't need to specify ElementName. You also don't need Mode=OneWay as a TextBlock.TextProperty already defaults to one-way since it's output-only.

Hope this helps!

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