2

I have C# WinForms code as follows to close all child forms when I open a new child form:

private void CloseAllActiveForms(Form[] MdiChildren)
{
    Form[] childArray = MdiChildren;
    foreach (Form childform in childArray)
    {
        childform.Close();
    }
}

How can I use in WPF windows?

I tried the below code, but it will close all windows including the Parent and the Active window.

private void CloseAllWindows()
{
    for (int intCounter = App.Current.Windows.Count - 1; intCounter >= 0; intCounter--)
    {
        Application.Current.Windows[intCounter].Close();
    }
}

Thanks.

2 Answers 2

6

As far as I know, MDI support for WPF is limited, so try using the Tag attribute when you create your pseudo-child windows:

Window child = new Window();
child.Tag = "mdi_child";

Then, in your loop, modify it like this:

foreach (Window win in App.Current.Windows)
{
    if (!win.IsFocused && win.Tag.ToString() == "mdi_child")
    {
        win.Close();
    }
}

Note that for the above solution to work, ALL windows must have a Tag attribute, or else an Exception will be thrown at win.Tag.ToString().

7
  • Is there alternative beside using MDI?
    – kyusan93
    Jun 5, 2012 at 3:07
  • MDI-style applications have "gone out of style," so that is kind of the reason why WPF dropped support. What is the goal of your application?
    – John Davis
    Jun 5, 2012 at 3:09
  • The most common alternative to MDI-based applications is a tabbed-based interface. The child windows become tabs, and all the tabs exist in the same window. Sorry, the previous comment hardly answers your questions.
    – John Davis
    Jun 5, 2012 at 3:10
  • I am having a wpf app with menu... I need to click on the menus to show another window within the main window... When I click on another menu item, the previous window that is opened should be closed before displaying the new window.
    – kyusan93
    Jun 5, 2012 at 3:11
  • In that case, you probably want to stick to MDI. Tabbed interface would not make as much sense. A complete explanation of how to do MDI is long, but here is a good project that extends WPF: wpfmdi.codeplex.com
    – John Davis
    Jun 5, 2012 at 3:13
5

Here is a method I use in WPF to close all child windows of my program, this code goes in the main window.cs file, but you could modify if(item!=this) to check for a particular window:

foreach(Window item in App.Current.Windows)
{
    if(item!=this)
        item.Close();
}

No faffing around with sub-classes or more lists (especially as the code already has a list of windows associated with it.)

If you wanted to selectively close windows then you could always modify the if statement to use a variable on the window class or check one of the pre-existing variables (such as a the class of the parent window) on the base window class.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.