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Here is my XAML for a TabItem. I want to be able to set the Color of a single gradient stop in a trigger. I know that I can re-define the gradient completely in the trigger's setter, but I want to access a specific property on the background so I can animate it in the future.

I have tried every variation of everything in the trigger's setter and googled for a long time - but I still can't get it to compile. I have also tried class.property syntax, but still nothing. The current error this code raises is:

"Type 'Background.GradientStops[0]' was not found."

I am pretty sure I know what is going on here - and perhaps what I want is impossible. But there has to be a way to animate a control's gradient in a control template...

Can anyone help me? thanks

<Style TargetType="{x:Type TabItem}">
	<Setter Property="Template">
		<Setter.Value>
			<ControlTemplate TargetType="{x:Type TabItem}">
				<TextBlock Padding="6 2 6 2" Name="TheHeader">
					<TextBlock.Background>
						<LinearGradientBrush StartPoint="0, 0" EndPoint="0, 1">
							<GradientStop Offset="0" Color="#f4fafd" />
							<GradientStop Offset="1" Color="#ceedfa" />
						</LinearGradientBrush>
					</TextBlock.Background>
					<ContentPresenter ContentSource="Header" Margin="0" />
				</TextBlock>
				<ControlTemplate.Triggers >
					<Trigger Property="IsSelected" Value="True">
						<Setter TargetName="TheHeader"
								Property="Background.GradientStops[0].Color" 
								Value="White" />
					</Trigger>
				</ControlTemplate.Triggers>
			</ControlTemplate>
		</Setter.Value>
	</Setter>
</Style>
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1 Answer

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You can animate it, like in the example here.

You also could use a slight hack to set it, though I always prefer creating multiple brushes as resources and swapping them or re-creating a brush in the as you mentioned.

<Style TargetType="{x:Type TabItem}">
		<Setter Property="Template">
			<Setter.Value>
				<ControlTemplate TargetType="{x:Type TabItem}">
					<TextBlock Padding="6 2 6 2"
							   Name="TheHeader" Tag="#f4fafd">
                                    <TextBlock.Background>
                                            <LinearGradientBrush StartPoint="0, 0"
																 EndPoint="0, 1">
                                                    <GradientStop Offset="0" 
																  Color="{Binding ElementName=TheHeader, Path=Tag}"/>
                                                    <GradientStop Offset="1"
																  Color="#ceedfa" />
                                            </LinearGradientBrush>
                                    </TextBlock.Background>
                                    <ContentPresenter ContentSource="Header"
													  Margin="0" />
					</TextBlock>
					<ControlTemplate.Triggers>
						<Trigger Property="IsSelected"
								 Value="True">
							<Setter TargetName="TheHeader"
									Property="Tag"
									Value="Red" />
						</Trigger>
					</ControlTemplate.Triggers>
				</ControlTemplate>
			</Setter.Value>
		</Setter>
	</Style>
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your right, that is hacky. But if you can animate it by assigning the stops Names, why can't you do that in a controltemplate? – Nelson LaQuet Jun 5 at 6:42

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