4

I have a window with DataContext set to itself with this simple XAML layout -

<StackPanel>
   <TextBlock Text="{Binding NameCLR}"/>
   <TextBlock Text="{Binding NameDP}"/>
</StackPanel>

and in code behind i have two properties NameCLR - CLR property and NameDP - Dependency Property.

    private string NameCLR
    {
        get { return "CLRProperty"; }
    }

    private string NameDP
    {
        get { return (string)GetValue(NameDPProperty); }
        set { SetValue(NameDPProperty, value); }
    }

    private static readonly DependencyProperty NameDPProperty =
        DependencyProperty.Register("NameDP", typeof(string), typeof(MainWindow),
                                        new UIPropertyMetadata("DPProperty"));

Since code-behind is a partial class definition and partial is XAML. So, i was assuming that private property should be visible to XAML. But to my amazement CLR and DP behaves differently.

Private Dependency property is accessible but private CLR property isn't.

I got the output as -

DPProperty

instead of

CLRProperty
DPProperty

Can someone let me know about this different behaviour in DP and CLR property?

1 Answer 1

8

The bound property is accessed by the Binding, not by the declaring class. A private CLR property like NameCLR is inaccessible, hence the Binding won't work.

However, when resolving the property path NameDP the Binding apparently bypasses the CLR wrapper for that property and directly accesses the underlying dependency property, which was registered with the dependency property system by calling DependencyProperty.Register. It is not relevant whether you have assigned the returned DependencyProperty reference to a private or public static field in your class. The dependency property was registered for your class, hence it can be looked up.

From the link here -

Dependency properties on a given type are accessible as a storage table through the property system, the WPF implementation of its XAML processor uses this table and infers that any given property ABC can be more efficiently set by calling SetValue on the containing DependencyObject derived type, using the dependency property identifier ABCProperty.

9
  • 4
    This is important to know for another reason; since the Binding system uses the dependency property directly, it will never call the getter and setter for the 'friendly wrapper' standard property exposed on the class. It's a very common mistake to put some special logic in the setter for this wrapper property, only to discover that it's not being called when the value is updated by the Binding system.
    – Dan Bryant
    Aug 20, 2013 at 18:29
  • 1
    @Clemens - CLR property cannot be accessed because property lookup is done by binding - Fair enough. But as mentioned binding will access underlying static DP property identifier which i have marked private. So, how it will be accessed?
    – Rohit Vats
    Aug 20, 2013 at 18:30
  • 1
    @RohitVats No, the binding will not access your private static field. It will get the property value directly from the dependency property system. Directly accessing the static field wouldn't work anyway, as it is static and thus not associated to any instance of your class.
    – Clemens
    Aug 20, 2013 at 18:33
  • Ok got it. +1. Can you please let me know that how dependency property system works internally to get instance property of class?
    – Rohit Vats
    Aug 20, 2013 at 18:35
  • 1
    I'd still be very interested in a link to some MDSN documentation that explicitly mentions bindings, not the "XAML processor" they talk about here. Property path resolution in a binding is something different than XAML processing.
    – Clemens
    Aug 20, 2013 at 18:47

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