vote up 3 vote down star
3

Every so often I find that I have accidentally broken data binding in my application. Either by renaming a property and not renaming it in the XAML or by a property throwing an exception for some reason.

By default data binding errors are logged to debug output and exceptions that are thrown are caught and suppressed.

Is there an easy way to have an exception thrown after the debug output is logged?

I want to know as soon as possible if data binding is broken (ideally picking it up in an automated test) and not risk the chance that it might go unnoticed until tested by a human.

flag

30% accept rate

2 Answers

vote up 0 vote down check

After some procrastination I finally set about coding a solution to my original issue.

My solution uses a custom trace listener (originally suggested by John) that logs to an output window. The output window is automatically displayed and bought to the foreground when an error occurs.

Here is my trace listener:

public class ErrorLogTraceListener : TraceListener
{
    public override void Write(string message)
    {
    	...
    }

    public override void WriteLine(string message)
    {
    	...
    }
}

TraceListener is defined in System.Diagnostics.

The custom trace listener must be hooked into the system to be used. The official way to do this is to set something in the registry and then use the App.config file to configure the trace listener.

However I found that there is a much easier way to do this programmatically:

    ErrorLogTraceListener listener = new ErrorLogTraceListener();
    PresentationTraceSources.Refresh();

    PresentationTraceSources.DataBindingSource.Listeners.Add(listener);
    PresentationTraceSources.DataBindingSource.Switch.Level = SourceLevels.Error;

PresentationTraceSources is also defined in System.Diagnostics.

For more information on trace sources see Mike Hillberg's blog.

Bea Stollnitz has some useful info on her blog.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Have a look at this blog article which may help get around this issue.

link|flag
Exactly what I would have posted, except I couldn't remember the link... – Benjol Apr 22 at 13:36
This is a good article about debugging problems with data bindings. But it depends on you having detected the problems in the first place right? This isn't really the answer I was after. What I want (if it is possible) is a concise description of how to make data-binding problems stand-out more in the first place. – Ashley Davis Apr 23 at 8:22
You could create a custom trace listener that throws exceptions – John Apr 23 at 10:27

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.