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I have TextBlock that has Inlines dynamicly added to it (basically bunch of Run objects that are either italic or bold).

In my application I have search function.

I want to be able to highlight TextBlock's text that is in being searched for.

By highlighting I mean changing certain parts of TextBlock text's color (keeping in mind that it may highlight several different Run objects at a time).

I have tried this example http://blogs.microsoft.co.il/blogs/tamir/archive/2008/05/12/search-and-highlight-any-text-on-wpf-rendered-page.aspx

But it seams very unstable :(

Is there easy way to solve this problem?

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2 Answers

up vote 4 down vote accepted

This question is similar to How to display search results in a WPF items control with highlighted query terms

In answer to that question, I came up with an approach that uses an IValueConverter. The converter takes a text snippet, formats it into valid XAML markup, and uses a XamlReader to instantiate the markup into framework objects.

The full explanation is rather long, so I've posted it to my blog: Highlighting Query Terms in a WPF TextBlock

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Ended up writing following code

At moment has few bugs, but solves the problem

if (Main.IsFullTextSearch)
{
    for (int i = 0; i < runs.Count; i++)
    {
        if (runs[i] is Run)
        {
            Run originalRun = (Run)runs[i];

            if (Main.SearchCondition != null && originalRun.Text.ToLower()
                .Contains(Main.SearchCondition.ToLower()))
            {
                int pos = originalRun.Text.ToLower()
                          .IndexOf(Main.SearchCondition.ToLower());

                if (pos > 0)
                {
                    Run preRun = CloneRun(originalRun);
                    Run postRun = CloneRun(originalRun);

                    preRun.Text = originalRun.Text.Substring(0, pos);
                    postRun.Text = originalRun.Text
                        .Substring(pos + Main.SearchCondition.Length);

                    runs.Insert(i - 1 < 0 ? 0 : i - 1, preRun);
                    runs.Insert(i + 1, new Run(" "));
                    runs.Insert(i + 2, postRun);

                    originalRun.Text = originalRun.Text
                        .Substring(pos, Main.SearchCondition.Length);

                    SolidColorBrush brush = new SolidColorBrush(Colors.Yellow);
                    originalRun.Background = brush;

                    i += 3;
                }
            }
        }
    }
}
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Indeed, can you post the full code or a link? – Peter J Dec 18 '10 at 22:45
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