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Our tester threw curly brackets at our persisting WPF RichTextBoxes. On save and reopen, there are magically more curly brackets.

I've condensed the issue / code down.

<Window x:Class="WpfApplication1.Window1"
xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"
xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml"
Title="Window1" Height="300" Width="300">
<Grid>
    <Grid.RowDefinitions>
        <RowDefinition Height="*"></RowDefinition>
        <RowDefinition Height="Auto"></RowDefinition>
        <RowDefinition Height="*"></RowDefinition>
    </Grid.RowDefinitions>

	<RichTextBox x:Name="rtb1" />
	<Button Grid.Row="1" Click="Button_Click">Draw a fish</Button>
	<RichTextBox x:Name="rtb2" Grid.Row="2"/>
</Grid>
</Window>

Two rich text boxes. On button click, the bottom one gets set to the result of the first one after persist and restore.

namespace WpfApplication1
{
	/// <summary>
	/// Interaction logic for Window1.xaml
	/// </summary>
	public partial class Window1 : Window
	{
		public Window1()
		{
			InitializeComponent();

			rtb1.Document = new FlowDocument(new Paragraph(new Run("{")));
		}


		public static FlowDocument CreateFlowDocumentFromByteArray(byte[] byteArray)
		{
			return (FlowDocument)XamlReader.Load(new MemoryStream(byteArray));
		}

		public static byte[] CreateByteArrayFromFlowDocument(FlowDocument flowDocument)
		{
			MemoryStream mStream = new MemoryStream();
			XmlWriterSettings settings = new XmlWriterSettings();
			settings.Indent = false;
			settings.OmitXmlDeclaration = true;
			XamlDesignerSerializationManager dsm = new XamlDesignerSerializationManager(XmlWriter.Create(mStream, settings));
			dsm.XamlWriterMode = XamlWriterMode.Value;
			XamlWriter.Save(flowDocument, dsm);
			mStream.Close();
			return mStream.ToArray();
		}

		private void Button_Click(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
		{
			rtb2.Document = CreateFlowDocumentFromByteArray(CreateByteArrayFromFlowDocument(rtb1.Document));
		}

	}
}

Why is this happening? How do we stop it?

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1 Answer

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I'll test the code more thoroughly tonight, but does it happen when the braces are not at the start of the text? E.g., if your run was "Hello{World}" does it still do this?

As you probably know, curly braces are significant in WPF because they are used for markup extensions. The following markup wouldn't work:

<Button Content="{Hello}" />

To get the right output, you'd usually escape it with:

<Button Content="{}{Hello}" />

Since you're using XamlReader.Load, there may be some confusion around the use of {}'s in the XAML, so they are being escaped. But that's just a guess. Out of interest, what does the XAML which is written out look like?

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It does only do it when it's at the start. When you write it out, it does have {}{ – Donnelle Feb 25 at 4:56
To be more precise, this occurs only when the curly brackets are at the start of a paragraph. We have a workaround (since we were already walking the tree applying styles) but it's just more overhead, and we are pretty frustrated that this happened at all. – Donnelle Mar 2 at 21:46

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