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I seem to be having a hard time today. All I want to do is make a TextBox hidden of visible based on a bool value databound to the Window its hosted in.

What I have just won't compile and I don't understand why. Please help.

 <TextBlock Grid.Column="2" Text="This order will be sent to accounting for approval" Foreground="Red" VerticalAlignment="Center" FontWeight="Bold" Padding="5" >
               <TextBlock.Style>
                  <Style>
                      <Style.Triggers>
                          <DataTrigger Binding="{Binding Path=AllowedToSubmit}" Value="True">
                            <Setter Property="Visibility" Value="Hidden" /> 
                          </DataTrigger>
                      </Style.Triggers>
                  </Style>
               </TextBlock.Style>
            </TextBlock>
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2 Answers

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You need to set the Style.TargetType in order for it to recognize the Visibility property:

<TextBlock Grid.Column="2" VerticalAlignment="Center" FontWeight="Bold" Foreground="Red" Padding="5" Text="This order will be sent to accounting for approval">
    <TextBlock.Style>
        <Style TargetType="{x:Type TextBlock}">
            <Style.Triggers>
                <DataTrigger Binding="{Binding Path=AllowedToSubmit}" Value="True">
                    <Setter Property="Visibility" Value="Hidden"/>
                </DataTrigger>
            </Style.Triggers>
        </Style>
    </TextBlock.Style>
</TextBlock>

Your binding path to AllowedToSubmit probably needs to have ElementName set to the Window's name, as well.

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Not necessarily - he might have set a DataContext further up the tree, and AllowedToSubmit is a property on that object. – Andy Mar 10 at 16:52
Agreed with Andy. If Russ is using MVVM, he probably has a DataContext to resolve the binding. – KP Adrian Mar 10 at 16:56
MVVM. I don't need to set the ElementName. Thanks for the tip though. My years of winforms is proving to be pretty worthless in WPF. :) – Russ Mar 10 at 17:04
Looks like a style within control TargetType could be defaulted to the owner, not sure why MS didn't do this... Any ideas? – Sergey Aldoukhov Mar 10 at 18:13
Good call about not needing the ElementName, I'll remove that part of the answer. re: Default TargetType, if the Style were sitting as a resource you'd get the same error, since it could be assigned to anything it needs to know what it will be ahead of time. – Robert Macnee Mar 10 at 18:48
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Another option is to bind TextBlock.Visibility directly to the property:

<Window>
    <Window.Resources>
        <BooleanToVisibilityConverter x:Key="BoolToVisibility" />
    </Window.Resources>
    <TextBlock Visibility="{Binding Path=AllowedToSubmit, Converter={StaticResource BoolToVisibility}}" />
</Window>

If you want it to work like in your sample, where true hides the TextBlock, then you can write your own converter to convert opposite of the built-in BooleanToVisibilityConverter.

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