Is it possible to set code behind a resource dictionary in WPF. For example in a usercontrol for a button you declare it in XAML. The event handling code for the button click is done in the code file behind the control. If I was to create a data template with a button how can I write the event handler code for it's button click within the resource dictionary.
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protected by Bill the Lizard♦ Mar 4 '11 at 12:12
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I think what you're asking is you want a code-behind file for a ResourceDictionary. You can totally do this! In fact, you do it the same way as for a Window: Say you have a ResourceDictionary called MyResourceDictionary. In your MyResourceDictionary.xaml file, put the x:Class attribute in the root element, like so:
Then, create a code behind file called MyResourceDictionary.xaml.cs with the following declaration:
And you're done. You can put whatever you wish in the code behind: methods, properties and event handlers. | |||||||||||
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I disagree with "ageektrapped"... using the method of a partial class is not a good practice. What would be the purpose of separating the Dictionary from the page then? From a code-behind, you can access a x:Name element by using:
You can do this in the OnApplyTemplate method if you want to hookup to controls when your custom control loads. OnApplyTemplate needs to be overridden to do this. This is a common practice and allows your style to stay disconnected from the control. (The style should not depend on the control, but the control should depend on having a style). | |||||
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As an addendum to ageektrapped's answer: Make sure that you put the fully qualified name of your codebehind class in the x:Class attribute.
Otherwise, if you merely put x:Class="MyResourceDictionary", the xaml parser won't find your class. | |||
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XAML is for constructing object graphs not containing code. | |||||||
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Gishu - whilst this might seem to be a "generally not to be encouraged practice" Here is one reason you might want to do it: The standard behaviour for text boxes when they get focus is for the caret to be placed at the same position that it was when the control lost focus. If you would prefer throughout your application that when the user tabs to any textbox that the whole content of the textbox was highlighted then adding a simple handler in the resource dictionary would do the trick. Any other reason where you want the default user interaction behaviour to be different from the out of the box behaviour seems like good candidates for a code behind in a resource dictionary. Totally agree that anything which is application functionality specific ought not be in a code behind of a resource dictionary. | |||
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