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Home/ Questions/Q 6770381
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 26, 20262026-05-26T15:18:19+00:00 2026-05-26T15:18:19+00:00

Pretty much it summarizes my problem here: Double check – does it ever make

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Pretty much it summarizes my problem here:
Double check – does it ever make sense to have internal viewmodel class?

I have controls.DLL and I’d like to keep this custom control bindings and viewmodel’s internal. However, this doesn’t seem to be possible.

How do you get around that? The only way I see it – don’t use bindings..

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-26T15:18:20+00:00Added an answer on May 26, 2026 at 3:18 pm

    Why do you have a view model for a custom control? I assume you’re assigning the view model object to the DataContext property, but this is almost always a mistake: the DataContext should be available to consumers to use and abuse as they please. Stated another way, what happens if a consumer of your custom control explicitly sets the DataContext? It sounds like your control will stop working and throw a bunch of xaml binding errors.

    A custom control is inherently lookless. There is no model or view model, just a view. That view is the .cs file. You supply a default look via your themes/generic.xaml file, but consumers should be able to supply their own template. If you’re tying them to a view model, they also need to know how to create a view model instance and all of its dependencies. You’ve just created highly coupled code. DI containers can loosen the coupling, but that just downgrades the relationship between classes from “coupled” to “related”. I say, why do consumers even need to know that information?

    A better approach is to provide all of the properties for your control as dependency properties. Then your generic.xaml can provide a control template that uses the more efficient TemplateBinding to bind properties/objects to your control. If you need to populate these dependency properties from a business object, expose another dependency property of type IBusinessObject and set the derived values in that object’s PropertyMetaData changed handler. If your IBusinessObject type contains a property which is yet another class which implements INotifyPropertyChanged, you should probably (1) rethink your object graph or (2) create a Bnding object in code using the subclass.

    I think following all of the above advice will eliminate the problem about which you’re concerned plus the other problems as well. Leave the view models to the UserControls. And yes, this is why custom controls are a MASSIVE headache. Doing them right is fairly involved.

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