In WPF, I have a static "Customer" object in the definition for MainWindow.xaml.cs. This customer has a publicly accessible string Name property. In expression blend 4, I click on the "Advanced Options" box beside the "Text" property for the TextBox that I would like to bind to the customer name. I then click "Data Binding..." -> "Element Property" -> "window" under "scene elements" -> click the expander arrow beside "ActiveCustomer" -> then click "Name" -> "OK". The binding is to a readonly TextBox, so One Way binding is acceptable as the default. But when I run my app, it doesn't display the customer's name. Any Suggestions?
<TextBox x:Name="AIAHNameTextBox" Height="26" Canvas.Left="90" TextWrapping="Wrap" Canvas.Top="8" Width="100" IsReadOnly="True" VerticalContentAlignment="Center" Text="{Binding ActiveCustomer.Name, ElementName=window, Mode=OneWay}" />
ActiveCustomer is an instance of my Customer class:
namespace WPFBankingSystem
{
public enum CustomerStatus
{ Open, Closed }
public enum TransferType
{ CheckingToSaving, SavingToChecking }
[Serializable]
public class Customer
{
private string address;
private Checking chkAcc;
private string name;
private int pin;
private Saving savAcc;
private string ssn;
private AccountStatus status;
private string tel;
public string Address
{
get { return address; }
set { address = value; }
}
public Checking ChkAcc
{
get { return chkAcc; }
set { chkAcc = value; }
}
public string Name
{ get { return name; } }
public int Pin
{
get { return pin; }
set { pin = value; }
}
public Saving SavAcc
{
get { return savAcc; }
set { savAcc = value; }
}
public string Ssn
{ get { return ssn; } }
public AccountStatus Status
{
get { return status; }
set { status = value; }
}
public string Tel
{
get { return tel; }
set { tel = value; }
}
public void create(string Name, string Address, string TelephoneNumber, string SSN, int PIN)
{
this.address = Address;
this.name = Name;
this.pin = PIN;
this.ssn = SSN;
this.status = AccountStatus.Open;
this.tel = TelephoneNumber;
}
public void delete()
{
if (this.chkAcc != null)
{ chkAcc.close(); }
if (this.savAcc != null)
{ savAcc.close(); }
}
public bool hasChkAcc()
{ return (this.chkAcc != null) ? true : false; }
public bool hasSavAcc()
{ return (this.savAcc != null) ? true : false; }
public void show()
{ }
public void transfer(double Amount, TransferType Type)
{
if(this.hasChkAcc() && this.hasSavAcc())
{
switch(Type)
{
case TransferType.CheckingToSaving:
this.chkAcc.Balance -= Amount;
this.savAcc.Balance += Amount;
break;
case TransferType.SavingToChecking:
this.savAcc.Balance -= Amount;
this.chkAcc.Balance += Amount;
break;
}
}
else
{ throw new Exception("You do not have both a checking account and a saving account."); }
}
public Customer()
{ }
~Customer()
{ this.delete(); }
}
}
Inside MainWindow.xaml.cs, the customer is defined just as a public Customer object:
public Customer ActiveCustomer
{ get; set; }
ActiveCustomeras well. – H.B. Dec 6 '11 at 4:05