KeyDown
captures the last key that was pressed down, which was Key.D3
, hence why you see 3
in your output. This is expected behavior.
Why would you want to use e.Key.ToString()
though? This would make sense if you wanted to see which key is being pressed, but you are explicitly checking for the SHIFT + 3 combo beforehand, so you already know what you're after.
// slightly modified your check
if (e.Key == Key.D3 && (Keyboard.Modifiers & ModifierKeys.Shift) == ModifierKeys.Shift)
{
MessageBox.Show("SHIFT+3 combo pressed");
}
Also, as @keyboardP noted in the comments, the location of the #
sign on the keyboard depends on the layout of the keyboard itself (US/UK etc), or as you have it configured by your operating system. Perhaps you could add checking of the keyboard layout into the mix (might be worth having a look at the InputLanguageManager
class from the System.Windows.Input
namespace).
EDIT: As an alternative, why not just track whether the #
character was input in the textbox, rather than checking for keyboard combos? It seems much more straightforward to me, though it depends on your requirements.