Reputation: 434
I currently have a simple WPF application, in the MainWindow I will have a variable (In this case the variable is a class that holds data). Then I have a User Control which has the same variable. Currently, I'm passing the variable with the ref keyword and it works perfectly fine, however, is this save/good practice? Is there a better way of linking this two variables together?
I am aware of the existence of DependencyProperty, however, I could not get it to work.
MainWindow:
public partial class MainWindow : Window
{
private TestClassWithInfo m_SelectedInfo;
public MainWindow()
{
InitializeComponent();
m_SelectedInfo = new DrawingInformation();
TestGridUC mp = new TestGridUC(ref m_SelectedInfo);
TestCanvas.Childrens.Add(mp);
}
}
TestGridUI:
public partial class TestGridUC : UserControl {
private TestClassWithInfo m_SelectedInfo;
public TestGridUC (ref TestClassWithInfo e)
{
InitializeComponent();
m_SelectedInfo = e;
}
}
TestClassWithInfo:
public class TestClassWithInfo
{
public Image imageTest;
public int intTest;
public TestClassWithInfo ()
{
m_img = null;
m_layer = 0;
}
}
Upvotes: 0
Views: 741
Reputation: 5968
I am aware of the existence of DependencyProperty, however, I could not get it to work.
A dependency property really is the way to go about it though:
public partial class TestGridUC : UserControl
{
public TestGridUC()
{
InitializeComponent();
}
public TestClassWithInfo Info
{
get { return (TestClassWithInfo)GetValue(InfoProperty); }
set { SetValue(InfoProperty, value); }
}
public static readonly DependencyProperty InfoProperty =
DependencyProperty.Register("Info", typeof(TestClassWithInfo), typeof(TestGridUC),
new PropertyMetadata(null /*or initialize to a default of new TestClassWithInfo()*/ ));
}
Now you can bind to that property from the xaml in your MainWindow:
<local:TestGridUC
Info="{Binding Info}"></local:TestGridUC>
If you need help with that part, as pr177 answered there are many tutorials on getting started with WPF with the MVVM pattern. The basics here would involve a view model object that contains a TestClassWithInfo
public property that you bind to.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 670
Have a look at the MVVM (Model-View-ViewModel) Pattern
There are many tutorials & introductions like that:
or
https://social.technet.microsoft.com/wiki/contents/articles/32164.wpf-mvvm-step-by-step-2.aspx
Upvotes: 1