13

I have a Usercontrol(TabUserControl) which contains a TabControl. The Viewmodel of that UserControl loads ab Observable collection of TabItems. One od those items is another user control. When I just load text in the tabcontrol there is no problem, but how can I load the other user control into the tabitem of the TabUserControl. I'm using MVVM.

Here's my code:

public class TabItem
{
    public string Header { get; set; }
    public object Content { get; set; } // object to allow all sort of items??
}

The Viewmodel of the TabUserControl

public class TabViewModel
{
    public ObservableCollection<TabItem> Tabs {get;set;}

    public TabViewModel()
    {
        Tabs = new ObservableCollection<TabItem>();
        //Tabs.Add(new TabItem { Header = "Overview", Content = new OverviewViewModel() }); How to load a usercontrol here if it's in the ItemCollection?
        Tabs.Add(new TabItem { Header = "Overview", Content = "Bla bla bla" });
        Tabs.Add(new TabItem { Header = "Two", Content = "Two's content" });
    }
}

And then the TabControl XAML:

<TabControl x:Name="_tabControl"
            ItemsSource="{Binding Tabs}">
  <TabControl.ItemContainerStyle>
    <Style TargetType="TabItem">
      <Setter Property="Header"
              Value="{Binding Header}" />
      <Setter Property="Content"
              Value="{Binding Content}" />
    </Style>
  </TabControl.ItemContainerStyle>
</TabControl>

It works as long as I dont load the viewmodel of the usercontrol in the tabItems collection. how can I make the UserTabControl load on to the TabItem? The intention is that every tabitem will contain a usercontrol. Each usercontrol then does it's own thing.

Hope someone can help me as I am a WPF beginner. Thx!

2 Answers 2

37

Ideally, the TabControl.ItemsSource should be set to a collection of ViewModels, and DataTemplates should be used to tell the WPF to draw each ViewModel with a specific UserControl.

This keeps between your business logic (ViewModels) completely separate from your UI (Views)

For example,

<TabControl x:Name="MyTabControl"
            ItemsSource="{Binding TabViewModels}"
            SelectedItem="{Binding SelectedTabViewModel}">

    <TabControl.Resources>
        <DataTemplate DataType="{x:Type my:ViewModelA}">
            <my:ViewAUserControl />
        </DataTemplate>
        <DataTemplate DataType="{x:Type my:ViewModelB}">
            <my:ViewBUserControl />
        </DataTemplate>
        <DataTemplate DataType="{x:Type my:ViewModelC}">
            <my:ViewCUserControl />
        </DataTemplate>
    </TabControl.Resources>

    <TabControl.ItemContainerStyle>
        <Style TargetType="TabItem">
            <Setter Property="Header" Value="{Binding Header}" />
        </Style>
    </TabControl.ItemContainerStyle>

</TabControl>

ViewModel containing TabControl's DataContext:

TabViewModels = new ObservableCollection<ITabViewModel>();
TabViewModels.Add(new ViewModelA { Header = "Tab A" });
TabViewModels.Add(new ViewModelB { Header = "Tab B" });
TabViewModels.Add(new ViewModelC { Header = "Tab C" });

SelectedTabViewModel = TabViewModels[0];
4
  • Hi Rachel. Thx for your comments. I understand the logic you're saying, but I am a bit strugling to get it to work. Especialy the part of the ITabViewModel, where do you get that from? Another part of my question is how can I do this if I don't know how many tabs should be added? I'm always certain of atleast one tab, but other tabs should be added when I click a button.. Thx for your help. Mar 21, 2012 at 14:35
  • @Stieven76 The ITabViewModel is simply an interface which defines a Header property. The ViewModels A, B, and C would all inherit from ITabViewModel, so they'd all share the same base class. Since you are using MVVM, the Button's Command property should point to a command in the ViewModel, which would simply add a new object to the TabViewModels collection, and probably set it as selected.
    – Rachel
    Mar 21, 2012 at 14:40
  • Thx Rachel. I've got it working the way I want. Thx for the help! Mar 21, 2012 at 15:42
  • Hi, What do you mean by ViewModelA , ViewModelB etc.. ? 3 different classes of VMs for each of the usercontrols ?
    – Li3ro
    May 10, 2016 at 8:43
6

Thanks Rachel for your answer. But it enforces declaring the DataContext during compile time itself. Like you did, relating each of the Views to their respective ViewModels in the DataTemplate of TabControl. We can achieve dynamic View-ViewModel linking when move this out to ViewModel. Here's how:

XAML:

<TabControl.ItemContainerStyle>
      <Style TargetType="TabItem">
          <Setter Property="Header" Value="{Binding Header}" />
          <Setter Property="Content" Value="{Binding Content}" />
      </Style>
</TabControl.ItemContainerStyle>

VM:

 public ObservableCollection<TabItem> TabItems { get; set; }
 public MainWindowViewModel()
        {
            TabItems = new ObservableCollection<TabItem>
            {
                new TabItem{Content = new TabAView() {DataContext = new TabAViewModel()}, Header = "Tab A"},
                new TabItem{Content = new TabBView(), Header = "Tab B"}
            };
        }

We can even make use of Action delegates to delay and invoke initialization of the TabItems only upon Tab SelectionChangedEvent. This achieves lot of memory saving if the UserControl Views have many UI elements.

1
  • Thanks Raviteja! I like this approach since it is cleaner. Works but one needs to set the TabControl's ItemsSource to TabItems like: ItemsSource="{Binding TabItems}"
    – Eric Wood
    Jun 2, 2020 at 19:35

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