For the life of me I can't find a solution for this:
I have a class set up that does several things, one of which is manipulate wpf windows. One of these windows is the MainWindow.xaml
.
So for instance I want this class to close the MainWindow.xaml
, that is if for example a method is called from within OtherClass.cs
.
Basically: I want to access unreferenced methods in the codebehind of a window (MainWindow.xaml.cs
) from a distant class, though within the same project (Visual Studio).
When I use the MainWindow (using MainWindow
or imports MainWindow
in vb.net) and use its members for closing the window, as so:
using MainWindow
Public class OtherClass
{
// OtherClass is instanced elsewhere and then is decided to close MainWindow.
// So I imagine doing the following:
private void CommandClose()
{
CloseMainWindow();
}
...
}
And inside MainWindow.xaml.cs:
Public class MainWindow
{
Public void CloseMainWindow()
{
this.close();
}
...
}
Though I receive the following error: "Reference to a non-shared member requires an object reference".
Meaning I should do something like:
using MainWindow
Public class OtherClass
{
MainWindow myWindow // Though now I have a new window :/
private void CommandClose()
{
myWindow.CloseMainWindow();
}
...
}
So to access any members within MainWindow.xaml.cs and not create a new instance I need them to be shared? But that would defeat the purpose of having it do anything to the window, because the close command wouldn't be available then!
I might be overlooking some things, but atm I can't seem to notice it. Would anyone be so kind as to show me a way to handle such a situation?
NB I am working in Windows Presentation Foundation if anyone was wondering.
To clarify further, here is a comment to one of the previous answers describing my situation:
What I am trying to do is run a command within another class, which is a public member of a WPF window. The window is already instanced and displayed. I just want to access its public members so I can manipulate the window from another class for convenience sake. This OtherClass.cs of mine is a class that handles console actions. The console is a custom control situated in the MainWindow.xaml.cs. When the user types for instance: /close, I want the MainWindow.xaml to close, but not just that, for in the future I want to add more features.
OtherClass
do the parsing, and I would also have it expose a set of public events - one for each command. I would haveMainWindow
subscribe to theCloseWindows
event fromOtherClass
.