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I have this:

<TabControl Margin="0,24,0,0">...</TabControl>

I want to bind only the "Top" part of the TabControl, which intuitively I would do it this way:

<TabControl Margin="0,{Binding ElementName=TheMenu, Path=Height},0,0">...</TabControl>

How do I do it ?

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3 Answers

up vote 15 down vote accepted

Have you tried using a converter like this?

in VB.Net

Public Class MarginConverter
  Implements IValueConverter

  Public Function Convert(ByVal value As Object, ByVal targetType As System.Type, ByVal parameter As Object, ByVal culture As System.Globalization.CultureInfo) As Object Implements System.Windows.Data.IValueConverter.Convert
    Return New Thickness(0, CDbl(value), 0, 0)
  End Function

  Public Function ConvertBack(ByVal value As Object, ByVal targetType As System.Type, ByVal parameter As Object, ByVal culture As System.Globalization.CultureInfo) As Object Implements System.Windows.Data.IValueConverter.ConvertBack
    Return Nothing
  End Function
End Class

Or in C#

public class MarginConverter : IValueConverter
{

    public object Convert(object value, System.Type targetType, object parameter, System.Globalization.CultureInfo culture)
    {
        return new Thickness(0, System.Convert.ToDouble(value), 0, 0);
    }

    public object ConvertBack(object value, System.Type targetType, object parameter, System.Globalization.CultureInfo culture)
    {
        return null;
    }
}

XAML

<Window.Resources>
    <local:MarginConverter x:Key="marginConverter"></local:MarginConverter>
</Window.Resources>
<Grid>
    <StackPanel>
        <Slider Name="Slider1"></Slider>
        <TabControl Name="TabControl" Margin="{Binding ElementName=Slider1, Path=Value, Converter={StaticResource marginConverter}}">
            <Button>Some content</Button>
        </TabControl>
    </StackPanel>
</Grid>

Edit:
Using a MultiConverter

It is also possible to get all four values during run-time and use a MultiValueConverter. The Top-Property of the Thickness-Object is not a Dependency-Object, therefor you can't define a binding to it (unless your source is not a Dependency-Object).

XAML

<Window.Resources>
    <local:MarginConverter x:Key="marginConverter"></local:MarginConverter>
    <local:MultiMarginConverter x:Key="multiMarginConverter"></local:MultiMarginConverter>
</Window.Resources>
<Grid>
    <StackPanel>
        <Slider Name="Slider1"></Slider>
        <Slider Name="Slider2"></Slider>
        <Slider Name="Slider3"></Slider>
        <Slider Name="Slider4"></Slider>
        <TabControl Name="TabControl">
            <TabControl.Margin>
                <MultiBinding Converter="{StaticResource multiMarginConverter}">
                    <Binding ElementName="Slider1" Path="Value"></Binding>
                    <Binding ElementName="Slider2" Path="Value"></Binding>
                    <Binding ElementName="Slider3" Path="Value"></Binding>
                    <Binding ElementName="Slider4" Path="Value"></Binding>
                </MultiBinding>
            </TabControl.Margin>
            <Button>Some content</Button>
        </TabControl>
    </StackPanel>
</Grid>

... and c#

  class MultiMarginConverter : IMultiValueConverter
  {
    public object Convert(object[] values, System.Type targetType, object parameter, System.Globalization.CultureInfo culture)
    {
      return new Thickness(System.Convert.ToDouble(values[0]),
                           System.Convert.ToDouble(values[1]),
                           System.Convert.ToDouble(values[2]),
                           System.Convert.ToDouble(values[3]));
    }

    public object[] ConvertBack(object value, System.Type[] targetType, object parameter, System.Globalization.CultureInfo culture)
    {
      return null;
    }
  }

Edit(2) Reverse-Binding:
I'm not sure if this will make you happy. In my humble opinion I would try to avoid this, but ok... If your source is a Dependency-Property, you can bind this to the Margin:

<Slider Name="Slider5" Minimum="-99" Maximum="0" Value="{Binding ElementName=TabControl, Path=Margin.Top, Mode=OneWayToSource}"></Slider>

But I've got some effects with this.
The trick is, that you do not bind a part of the Margin of your TabControl to "something else", but bind "something else" to the Margin of your TabControl and specify Binding-Mode OneWayToSource.

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But this way forces me to enter all the other numbers in the code, isn't there a way to use sub-tags in the markup, like: <TabControl.Margin.Thikness.Top="{Binding...}"...> – Tal Jun 6 '11 at 12:01
See Edit for details and suggestion with MultiValueConverter. Top (and Bottom and....) are no Dependency-Properties. For a Binding, at least one part has to be a Dependency-Property. – Markus Jun 6 '11 at 12:33
Ok, thanks, you gave me some code to think about... – Tal Jun 6 '11 at 13:32
Thanks. Problem solved! – Tal Jun 7 '11 at 10:56
I've noticed that when adding a FallBackValue to a Binding, it gets converted to Thickness before it's passed to the MultiMarginConverter which causes it to error out. Is there something that can prevent that, or do I have to just pull it apart in the converter? – Patrick Feb 21 at 17:30

You could try something like this answer from another question.

The solution uses an attached property that allows for XAML like the following:

<Button ap:MoreProps.MarginRight="10" />

The attached property is also backed by a DependencyObject so data binding will work.

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From your code, I figure that your menu and tabControl may overlap, so you want to use margin to separate them. I feel this practice like two Column CSS Layout.

Back to the point, I think you can apply TranslateFransform to TabControl.RenderTransform. You can bind Y property.

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