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My XAML ComboBox control is stuck in an endless loop when a selection is changed in the UI. The ComboBox sets the value of the bound property. When the property has changed, it raises a property changed event. This in turn causes the databinder to update the property again. This keeps looping until I get a stack overflow exception.

                   <ComboBox x:Name="OriginCountryCode"  Grid.ColumnSpan="2" Grid.Column="2" SelectedValue="{x:Bind Mode=TwoWay, Path=ViewModel.OriginCountryCode}"  DisplayMemberPath="Value" SelectedValuePath="Key" ItemsSource="{x:Bind ViewModel.CountryCodes}"   />

The control is bound to the following properties.

    private static  Dictionary<string, string> _countryCodes = null;
    public Dictionary<string, string> CountryCodes
    {
        get
        {
            if (_countryCodes != null) return _countryCodes;

            _countryCodes = new Dictionary<string, string>();
            var cultures = CultureInfo.GetCultures(CultureTypes.SpecificCultures);
            foreach (var culture in cultures)
            {
                var region = new RegionInfo(culture.LCID);
                _countryCodes[region.TwoLetterISORegionName] = region.DisplayName;
            }
            return _countryCodes;
        }
    }

    public string OriginCountryCode
    {
        get => _origin.CountryCode;
        set
        {
            _origin.CountryCode = value; RaisePropertyChanged(nameof(OriginCountryCode));
        }
    }

This behavior is odd as all my other controls do not exhibit this behavior. The BAML generated connector code for the ComboBox is different. One is is updated when there's a focus change and the other when the SelectedValue changes.

            case 15: // Views\QuotesPage.xaml line 77
                this.obj15 = (global::Windows.UI.Xaml.Controls.TextBox)target;
                (this.obj15).LostFocus += (global::System.Object sender, global::Windows.UI.Xaml.RoutedEventArgs e) =>
                {
                    if (this.initialized)
                    {
                        // Update Two Way binding
                        this.dataRoot.ViewModel.DestinationPostalCode = this.obj15.Text;
                    }
                };
                break;
            case 16: // Views\QuotesPage.xaml line 78
                this.obj16 = (global::Windows.UI.Xaml.Controls.ComboBox)target;
                (this.obj16).RegisterPropertyChangedCallback(global::Windows.UI.Xaml.Controls.Primitives.Selector.SelectedValueProperty,
                    (global::Windows.UI.Xaml.DependencyObject sender, global::Windows.UI.Xaml.DependencyProperty prop) =>
                    {
                    if (this.initialized)
                    {
                        // Update Two Way binding
                        this.dataRoot.ViewModel.DestinationCountryCode = (global::System.String)this.obj16.SelectedValue;
                    }
                });
                break;
0

1 Answer 1

4

Don't raise PropertyChanged when the property value hasn't changed.

public string OriginCountryCode
{
    get => _origin.CountryCode;
    set
    {
        if (_origin.CountryCode != value)
        {
            _origin.CountryCode = value; 
            RaisePropertyChanged(nameof(OriginCountryCode));
        }
    }
}
9
  • Well this is obviously the answer, but I had to put it up here to see if anyone ran into it. It appears this is a bug. The "proper" way to get around this is to use a command, but that's a lot of code just to get a value.
    – ATL_DEV
    Nov 10, 2017 at 18:58
  • @ATL_DEV "The "proper" way to get around this is to use a command" -- No, it isn't. The proper way to bind a dependency property to a viewmodel property is to bind it, and put that equal check in the viewmodel property setter to prevent recursion. How would you use a command for any part of this? Nov 10, 2017 at 19:01
  • Thanks. So what you are saying is that this behavior is a bug? I believe so. The equality check is not required for any other control even for the ones that generate the same binding code like switch buttons. I was thinking a command responding to eventchange would be the "recommended" way, but after your comment, I think this may just be a bug. Normally, .NET apis throws specific usage exceptions, instead of StackOverflowException or AccessFaultException.
    – ATL_DEV
    Nov 11, 2017 at 14:52
  • @ATL_DEV You’re the WPF expert, so I’ll have to take your word for it. If you ever find the time to explain how you did this with a command, I’m curious. Nov 11, 2017 at 14:58
  • Well, you can repond to the SelectionChanged event. Here's a link: stackoverflow.com/questions/36623733/…
    – ATL_DEV
    Nov 11, 2017 at 15:25

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