Just to add another answer here in case you don't have a view or Application.Current
is null. I realize this is probably uncommon but in my case I have an addin to a parent application and Application.Current
is null; I also want to pass one of my resources to the parent as an ImageSource
so I don't have a XAML view created to get resources from directly.
You can also make the dictionary into a code behind creatable object. Just set the x:Class
attribute in the XAML and then create a .xaml.cs
file in the code behind. Your updated XAML, lets call the code file MyDictionary.xaml
, would then look something like this:
<ResourceDictionary xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"
xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml"
xmlns:d="http://schemas.microsoft.com/expression/blend/2008"
xmlns:mc="http://schemas.openxmlformats.org/markup-compatibility/2006"
x:Class="Some.Namespace.MyDictionary"
mc:Ignorable="d">
...Resources...
</ResourceDictionary>
And the code behind (MyDictionary.xaml.cs
) would look something like this:
using System.Windows;
namespace Some.Namespace
{
public partial class MyDictionary : ResourceDictionary
{
public MyDictionary()
{
InitializeComponent();
}
}
}
Don't forget to call InitializeComponent()
as that's what loads the resources. Actually not sorry, see edit below
After you do this you can simply construct an instance of the class anywhere in code and reference the resources by key like this:
var dictionary = new MyDictionary();
var resource = dictionary["whateverKey"] as WhateverResourceType;
Thanks to this post for leading to the idea.
EDIT
Just ran into one potential issue with this. I got a 'Cannot re-initialize ResourceDictionary instance' exception with this setup on some of my controls. On further research this could be related to calling InitializeComponent
in the constructor. Instead I removed the constructor from the code behind and added a static method to get an initialized instance as follows:
public static MyDictionary ConstructInitializedInstance()
{
var dictionary = new MyDictionary();
dictionary.InitializeComponent();
return dictionary;
}
You could also just create and initialize in your code behind.