Both existing answers will do the swapping for you, at the data level. Here's what can be done to make the UI more user-friendly.
IMHO, the best UX to handle the swapping is, when you drag an item and move it over another, the latter should appear to where the dragged item was originally at. This clearly tells the user where exactly the items will go. Just like what's shown on the gif image below.
To do this you will need to create an Image
and use RenderTargetBitmap
to copy the look of the drop item to its source, when the drag item moves over the drop item. Of course when the drag action starts, you need to get the position of the drag item so you know where exactly to put this image.
Then, once the item is dropped, you should clear and hide the image and do the data exchange.
private void GridView_DragItemsStarting(object sender, DragItemsStartingEventArgs e)
{
// get item container, i.e. GridViewItem
var itemContainer = (GridViewItem)this.MyGridView.ContainerFromItem(e.Items[0]);
// get drag item index from its item container
_dragItemIndex = this.MyGridView.IndexFromContainer(itemContainer);
// get drag item position
var position = itemContainer.GetRelativePosition(this.LayoutRoot);
// set the width and height of the image
this.DropItemImage.Width = itemContainer.ActualWidth;
this.DropItemImage.Height = itemContainer.ActualHeight;
// move the image to this location
this.DropItemImage.RenderTransformOrigin = new Point(0, 0);
this.DropItemImage.RenderTransform.Animate(null, position.X, "TranslateX", 0, 0);
this.DropItemImage.RenderTransform.Animate(null, position.Y, "TranslateY", 0, 0);
}
private void GridView_Drop(object sender, DragEventArgs e)
{
// first we need to reset the image
this.DropItemImage.Source = null;
// get the drop & drop items
var dragItem = _groups[_dragItemIndex];
var dropItem = _groups[_dropItemIndex];
// then we swap their positions
_groups.RemoveAt(_dragItemIndex);
_groups.Insert(_dragItemIndex, dropItem);
_groups.RemoveAt(_dropItemIndex);
_groups.Insert(_dropItemIndex, dragItem);
}
private object _previous;
private async void ItemRoot_DragOver(object sender, DragEventArgs e)
{
// first we get the DataContext from the drop item in order to retrieve its container
var vm = ((Grid)sender).DataContext;
// get the item container
var itemContainer = (GridViewItem)this.MyGridView.ContainerFromItem(vm);
// this is just to stop the following code to be called multiple times druing a DragOver
if (_previous != null && _previous == itemContainer)
{
return;
}
_previous = itemContainer;
// get drop item index from its item container
_dropItemIndex = this.MyGridView.IndexFromContainer(itemContainer);
// copy the look of the drop item to an image
var bitmap = new RenderTargetBitmap();
await bitmap.RenderAsync(itemContainer);
this.DropItemImage.Source = bitmap;
// animate the image to make its appearing more interesting
this.DropItemImage.Animate(0, 0.4, "Opacity", 200, 0);
this.DropItemImage.RenderTransformOrigin = new Point(0.5, 0.5);
this.DropItemImage.RenderTransform.Animate(0.8, 1, "ScaleX", 200, 0, new ExponentialEase { EasingMode = EasingMode.EaseIn });
this.DropItemImage.RenderTransform.Animate(0.8, 1, "ScaleY", 200, 0, new ExponentialEase { EasingMode = EasingMode.EaseIn });
}
I have included a small sample project here just so you can check out how the animations are done. Please note that the data swapping part is not included, as I said, the other answers already explain it very well. :)