I had this problem too. I solved it using "The Memento Pattern Design". With this pattern you could easy save a copy of your original object and, in selectedIndexChange
(of a control) or in the Cancel button, you could restore easy the prior version of your object.
An example of use of this pattern is available at How is the Memento Pattern implemented in C#4?
An example of code:
If we have a class User with properties UserName Password and NombrePersona we need to add methods CreateMemento and SetMemento:
public class Usuario : INotifyPropertyChanged
{
#region "Implementación InotifyPropertyChanged"
internal void RaisePropertyChanged(string prop)
{
if (PropertyChanged != null) { PropertyChanged(this, new PropertyChangedEventArgs(prop)); }
}
public event PropertyChangedEventHandler PropertyChanged;
#endregion
private String _UserName = "Capture su UserName";
public String UserName
{
get { return _UserName; }
set { _UserName = value; RaisePropertyChanged("UserName"); }
}
private String _Password = "Capture su contraseña";
public String Password
{
get { return _Password; }
set { _Password = value; RaisePropertyChanged("Password"); }
}
private String _NombrePersona = "Capture su nombre";
public String NombrePersona
{
get { return _NombrePersona; }
set { _NombrePersona = value; RaisePropertyChanged("NombrePersona"); }
}
// Creates memento
public Memento CreateMemento()
{
return (new Memento(this));
}
// Restores original state
public void SetMemento(Memento memento)
{
this.UserName memento.State.UserName ;
this.Password = memento.State.Password ;
this.NombrePersona = memento.State.NombrePersona;
}
Then, we need a class Memento that will contain the "copy" of our object like this:
/// <summary>
/// The 'Memento' class
/// </summary>
public class Memento
{
//private Usuario _UsuarioMemento;
private Usuario UsuarioMemento { get; set; }
// Constructor
public Memento(Usuario state)
{
this.UsuarioMemento = new Usuario();
this.State.UserName = state.UserName ;
this.State.Password = state.Password ;
this.State.NombrePersona = state.NombrePersona ;
}
// Gets or sets state
public Usuario State
{
get { return UsuarioMemento; }
}
}
And we need a class that will generate and contains our memento object:
/// <summary>
/// The 'Caretaker' class
/// </summary>
class Caretaker
{
private Memento _memento;
// Gets or sets memento
public Memento Memento
{
set { _memento = value; }
get { return _memento; }
}
}
Then for implement this pattern we have to create an instance of Caretaker
class
Caretaker creadorMemento = new Caretaker();
And create our memento object when a new user was selected for edit, for example in selectedIndexChange
after the SelectedUser has been initializing, I use the method for event RaisPropertyChanged
like this:
internal void RaisePropertyChanged(string prop)
{
if (PropertyChanged != null) { PropertyChanged(this, new PropertyChangedEventArgs(prop)); }
if (prop == "RowIndexSelected") // This is my property assigned to SelectedIndex property of my DataGrid
{
if ((this.UserSelected != null) && (creadorMemento .Memento != null))
{
this.UserSelected.SetMemento(creadorMemento .Memento);
}
}
if (prop == "UserSelected") // Property UserSelected changed and if not is null we create the Memento Object
{
if (this.UserSelected != null)
creadorMemento .Memento = new Memento(this.UserSelected);
}
}
An explication for this, when selectedIndexChanged
change value we check if UserSelected
and our memento object
are not null means that our actual item in edit mode has changed then we have to Restore our object with the method SetMemento
.
And if our UserSelected
property change and is not null we "Create our Memento Object" that we will use when the edit was cancel.
For finish, we have use the SetMemento
method in every method that we need to cancel the edition, and when the edit has commited like in the SaveCommand we can set null our memento object like this this.creadorMemento = null
.