I am using .Net 4.5.2 with WPF and C# 5.0. I created a Window in a WPF project. I would like to copy paste this window in the solution explorer, making a second window, and rename it to a new name.
When I do this, the new (copied) window's InitializeComponent() method always gives me an error. How does one cleanly copy a window (and it's code, etc.) in the solution explorer?
This question was answered partially here: Copy pasting WPF window gives error however the answer did not solve my issue.
My approach (that does not work):
- Create a window and title it WindowTest
- In the solution explorer, select WindowTest and copy, then paste it into the same project
- Rename the new copied Window to WindowTestCopy
- In WindowTestCopy, change the x:class property in xaml to be WindowTestCopy instead of WindowTest
- Open the code behind in WindowTestCopy, and change any references to WindowTest to WindowTestCopy
- Compile
Expected: no errors, the copy (clone) operation is successful
Actual: compile error "Cannot access non-static method 'InitializeComponent' in static context".
I have only this one error. Obviously InitializeComponent() is becoming an ambiguous reference, but it isn't clear to me how to make manual edits to the code to fix this. I wish that VS or Resharper would automatically assist me with this.
UPDATE
WindowTest contains two userControls that I had not mentioned previously. After the copy/paste occurs, for some reason the following xaml elements became malformed within WindowTestCopy:
xmlns:userControls....(ellided) xmlns:userControls....(ellided)
By deleting these, Resharper determined that the userControl objects were missing xmlns reference tags and asked me if I wanted to import them automatically. I selected yes. After Resharper added the missing xmlns reference tags I was able to compile (all errors disappeared).
I do not have an explanation for why this happened. In my steps to reproduce, I do not edit the xaml and it should therefore be identical to the originating xaml. This is curious behavior, but at least there is a workaround as stated.