11

Is there a way to respond to Snap in C# in a Metro app? When one of the pages is snapped I need to show another one. My idea is to respond to snap by naviating to another page.

I found

var currentView = ApplicationLayout.GetForCurrentView();
currentView.LayoutChanged += new TypedEventHandler<ApplicationLayout, ApplicationLayoutChangedEventArgs>(currentView_LayoutChanged);

but it looks like it no longer works in Consumer Preview. Is there another way?

2

3 Answers 3

24

In Release Preview you need to react to a different event, again :) It's SizeChanged now, not ViewStateChanged.

Previously, your app would do something like this to handle view state changes:

using Windows.UI.ViewManagement;

// Register for the viewstatechanged event
ApplicationView.GetForCurrentView().ViewStateChanged += ViewStateChanged;    

private void ViewStateChanged(ApplicationView sender, ApplicationViewStateChangedEventArgs e)
{
     // Obtain view state from event payload
     ApplicationViewState myViewState = e.ViewState; 
}

Now apps should do this:

using Windows.UI.ViewManagement;

// Register for the window resize event
Window.Current.SizeChanged += WindowSizeChanged;     

private void WindowSizeChanged(object sender, Windows.UI.Core.WindowSizeChangedEventArgs e)
{
    // Obtain view state by explicitly querying for it
    ApplicationViewState myViewState = ApplicationView.Value;
}

More info here

0
9

Jowen had the answer, I'm just adding some more to the WindowSizeChanged code here:

    ApplicationViewState viewState = ApplicationView.Value;
    if (viewState == ApplicationViewState.Filled)
    {
        System.Diagnostics.Debug.WriteLine("viewState is Filled");
    }
    else if (viewState == ApplicationViewState.FullScreenLandscape)
    {
        System.Diagnostics.Debug.WriteLine("viewState is FullScreenLandscape");
    }
    else if (viewState == ApplicationViewState.Snapped)
    {
        System.Diagnostics.Debug.WriteLine("viewState is Snapped");
    }
    else if (viewState == ApplicationViewState.FullScreenPortrait)
    {
        System.Diagnostics.Debug.WriteLine("viewState is FullScreenPortrait");
    }
    else
    {
        System.Diagnostics.Debug.WriteLine("viewState is something unexpected");
    }

What I find a little surprising is that when I copied this placeholder code to another page, it gives the code a bounded rectangle and, since I did not have "using Windows.UI.ViewManagement;" yet, when I hovered over the unrecognized code, it asked "Import the file for the pasted code?" I guess it (I don't know if "it" is VS or Resharper) is keeping track of code that has pasted in, as it may be viewed with a rakishly angled or akimbo eyebrow.

2
  • True, that would be preferable. Jul 24, 2013 at 18:31
  • 1
    'ApplicationViewState may be altered or unavailable for releases after Windows 8.1. Instead, query for window layout sizes directly.' AGAIN OUTDATED.
    – Jawahar
    Jul 16, 2015 at 7:27
5

In Consumer Preview you need to react to a different event. It's ViewStateChanged now, not LayoutChanged.

2
  • 6
    This answer is outdated. Check out my post below for Release Preview
    – Jowen
    Jun 14, 2012 at 11:57
  • 1
    to be fair, it is not wrong FOR CONSUMER PREVIEW which is the first three words of the answer. It is not right for the current version, but that's not the same as being wrong. Oct 15, 2013 at 16:04

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