There are cases when you have many UI updates due a massive amount of INotifyChangedProperties events. In that case you might want to signal the changes to UI only once when all the properties are set like in a batch.

I found this great article that explains how to defer the refresh of the ViewCollection:

http://marlongrech.wordpress.com/2008/11/22/icollectionview-explained/

However I get an exception when the View is defered and I try to add something to teh collection. I dont understand why this shouldnt be allowed. Thats the whole point of it in first place.

InvalidoperationException: Cannot change or check the contents or Current position of CollectionView while Refresh is being deferred.

Does anyone know how to solve this problem? Many Thanks,

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2 Answers

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Yes, don't modify the collection in question. I think that you are misunderstanding the purpose of a collection view. This is what MSDN says;

You can think of a collection view as a layer on top of a binding source collection that allows you to navigate and display the collection based on sort, filter, and group queries, all without having to manipulate the underlying source collection itself.

So in short, don't defer the refresh until you are done adding and removing, and otherwise manipulating your collection.

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You haven't fully answered the question as DRAirey1 points out. – Joey Apr 24 at 13:12
@Joey: DRAirey1 is speculating about how the feature "should" work as opposed to how it "actually" works. In the meantime, I think the little green checkmark indicates that the OP is satisfied with the answer. – A.R. Apr 24 at 13:25
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I think you are misunderstanding or misrepresenting the MSDN help on the subject. They are saying that you don't have to modify the underlying collection to sort or filter. They are not saying that you can't modify the underlying collection. The OP has a very valid point. We have a large collection that has been sorted and filter for the user and it is displayed in a list box. When the user selects a range of those records and wants to delete them, we are forced into a situation where the ListCollectionView refreshs view for every item that was deleted.

I think the OP's question is very valid. The performance is horrendous because we have multiple filters on a huge set of data. The DeferRefresh has a real purpose on a class like the ListCollectionView, but in inexplicably diabled for inserts and deletes, when you need it the most.

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You are right, the docs don't explicitly say that you "can't", but the resulting exception does. Meanwhile, if ListCollectionView isn't doing what you want, make your own. – A.R. Apr 24 at 13:24
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