Sergey Aldoukhov
Sergey Aldoukhov

Reputation: 22744

What does "{Binding Path=.}" mean in WPF binding?

What does {Binding Path=.} mean in a WPF binding?

I see some people use it, but couldn't find any explanation.

Are there any other special symbols in binding syntax (other than {Binding /})?

Upvotes: 105

Views: 121552

Answers (2)

Ryan Versaw
Ryan Versaw

Reputation: 6495

I found this WPF Binding CheatSheet a few months back and find it very useful, especially for anyone learning WPF. There are some spelling mistakes within it, but it is still quite good.

Here is a small excerpt (which is supposed to have tabular formatting):

Basic Binding
{Binding} Bind to current DataContext.
{Binding Name} Bind to the “Name” property of the current DataContext.
{Binding Name.Length} Bind to the Length property of the object in the Name property of the current DataContext.
{Binding ElementName=SomeTextBox, Path=Text} Bind to the “Text” property of the element XAML element with name=”SomeTextBox” or x:Name=”SomeTextBox”.

Direct link to CheatSheet

Upvotes: 89

micahtan
micahtan

Reputation: 19200

This is shorthand for binding to the current source. For more info see here.

From the documentation specifically:

Optionally, a period (.) path can be used to bind to the current source. For example, Text="{Binding}" is equivalent to Text="{Binding Path=.}".

Upvotes: 70

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