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I have a WPF DataGrid that contains some data. I would like to set the width of the columns such that the content fits in and never gets cropped (instead, a horizontal scroll bar should become visible). Additionally, I want the DataGrid to fill the whole place available (I am working with a DockPanel). I am using the following code (simplified):

<DataGrid ItemsSource="{Binding Table}">
    <DataGrid.Columns>
        <DataGridTextColumn MinWidth="100" Width="Auto" Header="Column 1" Binding="{Binding Property1}" />
        <DataGridTextColumn MinWidth="200" Width="Auto" Header="Column 2" Binding="{Binding Property2}" />
    </DataGrid.Columns>
</DataGrid>

This apparently does not work out of the box with Width="Auto" as it always looks something like this:

DataGrid: only the first part of the row is marked as "selected"

This obviously looks ugly. I would like to have the whole row selected, or, which would be much better, the columns to fill the whole width, but as one can see, this does not work.

If I use Width="*" instead, the content of the columns gets cropped which is even worse for me.

I found a similar question here, and a workaround was posted there. This may work, but I am working with the MVVM pattern, so the ItemsSource gets updated in the ViewModel and I cannot think about a way of doing it from there, because I cannot access the ActualWidth property of the DataGridColumn. Also, I would like to do it only in XAML if possible.

I would appreciate any help. Thanks!

Edit: As I still don't have a clue what to do about it, I start a small bounty. I would be very happy about a suggestion what one could do about my problem. Thanks again!

Edit 2: After saus' answer I thought about the options again. The problem is that I need to update the Width and the MinWidth properties also during the application is running, so not only after loading the window. I already tried to do something like

column.Width = new DataGridLength(1, DataGridLengthUnitType.Auto);
column.MinWidth = column.ActualWidth;
column.Width = new DataGridLength(1, DataGridLengthUnitType.Star);

in some event that is fired when the underlying ItemsSource of the DataGrid is updating. However, this does not work, as the ActualWidth property does not seem to change after setting the Width on Auto. Is there an option to somehow "repaint" it in order to get the ActualWidth property updated? Thanks!

2
  • I'm not sure I understand what you want to do here. If the Width of the Column gets wider than the DataGrid you want a vertical scrollbar and you don't want the text to wrap? Do you mean a horizontal scrollbar? Otherwise, this makes no sense to me but maybe I'm just slow here :) Feb 17, 2011 at 9:55
  • 1
    Thanks for the hint! Of course I meant a horizontal scrollbar, it would not make any sense otherwise ;-)
    – Sören
    Feb 17, 2011 at 13:13

6 Answers 6

36
+25

I would suggest using the workaround that you linked to. It does work. In the codebehind of your view, add the following to the constructor after InitializeComponent():

Griddy.Loaded += SetMinWidths; // I named my datagrid Griddy

and define SetMinWidths as:

public void SetMinWidths(object source, EventArgs e )
        {
            foreach (var column in Griddy.Columns)
            {
                column.MinWidth = column.ActualWidth;
                column.Width = new DataGridLength(1, DataGridLengthUnitType.Star);
            }
        }

I'm assuming that the reason you don't want to use this solution is that you believe that MVVM prohibits code in the codebehind. But since this is entirely view specific logic I believe that it is justified in this case. The whole "MVVM prohibits code in the codebehind" thing is a bit of a misconception.

But if you are bound by style guides, or you want this logic to be available for all datagrids in your app, you can make an attached behaviour that does the job like this:

public class SetMinWidthToAutoAttachedBehaviour 
    {
        public static bool GetSetMinWidthToAuto(DependencyObject obj)
        {
            return (bool)obj.GetValue(SetMinWidthToAutoProperty);
        }

        public static void SetSetMinWidthToAuto(DependencyObject obj, bool value)
        {
            obj.SetValue(SetMinWidthToAutoProperty, value);
        }

        // Using a DependencyProperty as the backing store for SetMinWidthToAuto.  This enables animation, styling, binding, etc...
        public static readonly DependencyProperty SetMinWidthToAutoProperty =
            DependencyProperty.RegisterAttached("SetMinWidthToAuto", typeof(bool), typeof(SetMinWidthToAutoAttachedBehaviour), new UIPropertyMetadata(false, WireUpLoadedEvent));

        public static void WireUpLoadedEvent(DependencyObject d, DependencyPropertyChangedEventArgs e)
        {
            var grid = (DataGrid)d;

            var doIt = (bool)e.NewValue;

            if (doIt)
            {
                grid.Loaded += SetMinWidths;
            }
        }

        public static void SetMinWidths(object source, EventArgs e)
        {
            var grid = (DataGrid)source;

            foreach (var column in grid.Columns)
            {
                column.MinWidth = column.ActualWidth;
                column.Width = new DataGridLength(1, DataGridLengthUnitType.Star);
            }
        }
    }

and then for any datagrid that you want to apply this behaviour to, add the following:

<DataGrid ItemsSource="{Binding Table}" local:SetMinWidthToAutoAttachedBehaviour.SetMinWidthToAuto="true">

And then your conscience, as well as your codebehind, will be clear.

7
  • 3
    Hi, thanks a lot for that! Actually, I don't think that completely view specific stuff should not be in the code-behind. The problem is rather that the content of the DataGrid changes in the ViewModel, so the View does not know when it has to call SetMinWidths again. Maybe there would be a way that the DataGrid changes as soon as my NotifyPropertyChanged method gets called? I think that is the same problem with the attached behaviour, but I will probably find a way to fix that. Will be back with more infos soon. Thanks again!
    – Sören
    Feb 18, 2011 at 9:20
  • see my post, i edited it: Unfortunately, i didn't get it to work like that. For the reasons see above.
    – Sören
    Feb 18, 2011 at 10:42
  • 1
    Do we need to unsubscribe that event to avoid memory leaks?
    – Den
    Nov 10, 2015 at 14:59
  • 1
    For me this pattern shrank all the columns to their minimum size, thus it just made the opposite.
    – Mr.B
    Jun 21, 2016 at 11:16
  • 1
    Another flaw of this solution that it makes absolutely unable to edit columns' width.
    – Mr.B
    Jun 21, 2016 at 11:30
4

Use a TextBlock with text wrapping inside template column:

<DataGrid ItemsSource="{Binding Table}">      
    <DataGrid.Columns>          
        <DataGridTextColumn MinWidth="100" Width="Auto" Header="Column 1"
                            Binding="{Binding Property1}" />          
        <DataGridTemplateColumn Width="*" Header="Column 2">
            <DataGridTemplateColumn.CellTemplate>
                <DataTemplate>
                    <TextBlock Text="{Binding Property2}" TextWrapping="Wrap" />  
                </DataTemplate>
            </DataGridTemplateColumn.CellTemplate>
        </DataGridTemplateColumn>
    </DataGrid.Columns>  
</DataGrid>
3
  • Thanks for your suggestion, but I don't want to wrap the text. As mentioned above, I would rather like to get a vertical scrollbar as soon as the text gets too wide.
    – Sören
    Feb 14, 2011 at 23:07
  • The point of templated columns is that you can use whatever control fits your needs inside the DataTemplate, for example <TextBox VerticalScrollBarVisibility=Auto ...> Feb 14, 2011 at 23:49
  • 3
    i don't want to have a scrollbar in the specific column, but rather one for the whole datagrid which also comes up if i set the width of the columns on "Auto" and the space does not suffice... it would look very bad if you have a scrollbar in every cell...
    – Sören
    Feb 15, 2011 at 11:28
1

how about this:

for your columns' MinWidth, you setup a binding to the dataGrid's ScrollContent's Width, with a converter that divide this width by the number of columns

you need some code behind for the converter, but this would keep your MVVM structure intact.

might be a long shot though, did not have the time to try it.

Edit: I put some more thought into this and there a pb: it will not work well if you have, say, one huge column and a few small ones. I assumed that all cols are the same width, which is obviously not the case here.

You might want to explore this way though. Using bindings on the Widths with converters is about the only thing I can think of that could work: since you basically have 2 conditions to take into account when calculating a column's width, there will be no easy way to do this.

2
  • okay, thanks for the idea, i will think about that. However, I indeed have one columns that gets much wider than the other columns, so it won't work with the first suggestion. I think you are right that i need to use bindings for the width of the columns (that is what i think as well), but it will still be a challenge to find the right minwidth/width for each column ^^
    – Sören
    Feb 17, 2011 at 13:18
  • it certainly will. ^^ If I may add a piece of advise: don't use the MinWidth property in conjunction with the Width property if you can avoid it. It can lead to massive headache. e.g.: set the minWidth to 100, then the width to 80, and the control's width will be 80: the width takes over the minWidth if you set it by program...
    – David
    Feb 17, 2011 at 13:21
1

I added the Event to the DataGrid that redefine their width regarding to the actual width of the DataGrid:

 private static void OnLoaded(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
    {
        DataGrid dg = sender as DataGrid;
        foreach (var column in dg.Columns)
        {
            column.Width = new DataGridLength(dg.ActualWidth / dg.Columns.Count, DataGridLengthUnitType.Pixel);
        }
    }

The line:

column.Width = new DataGridLength(1, DataGridLengthUnitType.Star);

was absolutely senceless. Definition of DataGridLengthUnitType.Star shrinks the columns width to their minimum width, and makes their width static and uneditable.

1

use this for any column you want to fit to its content: Width = "SizeToCells"

0

Force the last column to take all the remaining space in datagrid

grid.Columns[grid.Columns.Count -1].Width = new 
                  DataGridLength(250, DataGridLengthUnitType.Star);

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