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In Silverlight 2....

I have a RadioButton in my xaml code as follows:

<RadioButton GroupName="Gender" Content="Male" IsChecked="{Binding Path=Gender, ConverterParameter=1, Mode=TwoWay, Converter={StaticResource RadioStringConverter}}" Width="49" HorizontalAlignment="Left"/>

This works great. My issue is in trying to duplicate this functionallity dynamically.

RadioButton rb = new RadioButton() {GroupName = "Gender", Content = "Male" ,Width = (double)49,HorizontalAlignment = System.Windows.HorizontalAlignment.Left};

this works but when I try to put the converter in, it breaks. What is the proper way to do this? Any good working examples?

Here is what I tried....

RadioButton rb = new RadioButton() {GroupName = "Gender", Content = "Male" ,Width = (double)49,HorizontalAlignment = System.Windows.HorizontalAlignment.Left};

RadioStringConverter rsc = new RadioStringConverter();

Binding binding = new Binding(layout.FieldName) { Source = mainLayout.DataContext, Mode = BindingMode.TwoWay,ConverterParameter = 1,Converter = rsc};  // to emulate the "{StaticResource RadioStringConverter}"};

rb.SetBinding(RadioButton.IsCheckedProperty, binding);

sp.Children.Add(rb);

Although this compiles fine, it does not run correctly. 1) How do I reference the static resource dynamically? 2) How do I add this static resource to the XAML dynamically? Right now I have this reference hard coded.

Am I making this more difficult than it needs to be?

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3 Answers

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Although it IS possible, as you have found out, are you sure you want to be creating the RadioButton dynamically?

I have been there... I have written the exact same code... but I soon realized that I was just doing it wrong. In my case, I used an ItemsControl, and bound the values using a template... completely eliminating the need to create them by myself dynamically.

I obviously don't know the larger context, but consider if you should be doing this more declaratively using some sort of dynamic container instead.

Actually, after I discovered MVVM, I completely eliminated the need for data converters at the UI layer. Data converters are obsolete with MVVM :)

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Can you elaborate more on MVVM as well as the dynamic containers? I'd love to see some small samples on your approach to this! – JLewis May 7 at 15:17
So, you can find a lot of information on the web about MVVM (Model-View-ViewModel)... just search for it. It essentially makes the XAML a layer on top of everything else, and eliminates all (most of) your code-behind. Your ViewModel implements INotifyPropertyChanged and is a representation of the UI (properties for Visibility, Enabled, Data, Commands, etc). In this case, you create a view model that has everything you want in it... a bool for selected state, the text, possibly an enum for the group, etc. Then, a small user control that binds to the ViewModel. – Brian Genisio May 7 at 15:45
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Solution found.... Basically I had to create an instance of the converter class and pass it's interface to the converter as such:

Binding binding = new Binding(layout.FieldName) { Source = mainLayout.DataContext, Mode = BindingMode.TwoWay,ConverterParameter = 1,Converter = (rsc as IValueConverter)};

Glad it turned out simple and doable :)

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I believe this is not supported in Silverlight 2. For difinitive infromation see this presentation.

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This IS supported. I have done it. – Brian Genisio Apr 21 at 19:22

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