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Home/ Questions/Q 679897
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T01:18:39+00:00 2026-05-14T01:18:39+00:00

I have a custom panel for a listbox <ItemsPanelTemplate x:Key=FloatPanelTemplate> <Controls:FloatPanel x:Name=CardPanel /> </ItemsPanelTemplate>

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I have a custom panel for a listbox

<ItemsPanelTemplate x:Key="FloatPanelTemplate">
    <Controls:FloatPanel x:Name="CardPanel" />
</ItemsPanelTemplate>

The panel lays out its children using its X and Y dependency properties.
This all works nicely when the FloatPanel is used by itself – I’m using FrameworkPropertyMetadataOptions.AffectsArrange | FrameworkPropertyMetadataOptions.AffectsMeasure on the dependency properties of the child items to tell the FloatPanel to redraw its layout.

When I use it in a Listbox (code above) then it draws fine the first time, but when I drag the children (which modifies the item’s X and Y) it is not notifying the Listbox that it needs to redraw the FloatPanel’s children. I think the issue is related to the fact that each item in the bound collection is wrapped with a ListBoxItem.

Hopefully I’ve described what i’m doing well enough that someone can tell me how to make the panel (or its children) tell it needs to do the Layout routines again. As I said it works once (initial draw) but then dragging items doesn’t work (Listbox isnt aware that its children have changed and needs to relayout.) If I drag an item and then resize the window, the listbox does a layout and the items are drawn in their new locations.

How do I notify the ListBox (or more importantly the FloatPanel in the ItemsPanelTemplate) that it needs to do a Layout pass?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T01:18:39+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 1:18 am

    Instead try FrameworkPropertyMetadataOptions.AffectsParentMeasure and FrameworkPropertyMetadataOptions.AffectsParentArrange.

    Those names… Thank God for intellisense, huh?

    As you’ve noted, since ListBoxItem is your element’s immediate layout parent, changes to the dependency properties that affect the parent’s layout will not be “seen” by the panel which is further up the visual tree.

    So instead what you may need to do unfortunately is to traverse the visual tree until you find an element deriving from Panel and call its InvalidateArrange method.

    DependencyObject obj=this;
    while ( (obj=VisualTreeHelper.GetParent(obj)) != null) {
        Panel p = obj as Panel;
        if (p != null) {
            p.InvalidateArrange();
            break;
        }
    }
    

    It’s ugly, but maybe a WPF guru will have a better suggestion.

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