say I have this control:
public partial class bloc999 : UserControl
{
bloc999Data mainBlock = new bloc999Data();
public bloc999()
{
InitializeComponent();
mainBlock.txtContents = "100";
base.DataContext = mainBlock;
}
}
in the xaml:
<TextBox Margin="74,116,106,0" Name="txtContents"
Text="{Binding Path=txtContents, UpdateSourceTrigger=PropertyChanged,Mode = TwoWay}" />
<TextBox Margin="74,145,106,132" Name="txtContents2"
Text="{Binding Path=txtContents2, UpdateSourceTrigger=PropertyChanged,Mode = TwoWay}" />
Then I have this class:
public class bloc999Data : INotifyPropertyChanged
{
string _txtContents;
string _txtContents2;
public event PropertyChangedEventHandler PropertyChanged;
void NotifyPropertyChanged(string propName)
{
if (this.PropertyChanged != null)
this.PropertyChanged(
this, new PropertyChangedEventArgs(propName));
}
public string txtContents2
{
get
{
return this._txtContents2;
}
set
{
if (int.Parse(value) > int.Parse(this._txtContents))
{
this._txtContents2 = "000";
}
else
this._txtContents2 = value;
NotifyPropertyChanged("txtContents2");
}
}
public string txtContents
{
get
{
return this._txtContents;
}
set
{
this._txtContents = value;
NotifyPropertyChanged("txtContents");
}
}
}
Ok now say I have A button on the form and I do this in the code:
mainBlock.txtContents2 = "7777777";
It puts 000 in the textbox, but If i just type in manually, in the textbox (txtContents2), the setter code is called but for some reason the textboxes value does not change, the instance value does change. help?
I believe it’s just because the value is changing within the context of the data binding operation, so WPF just ignores it because it knows the value is changing and thinks the event is superfluous. What it doesn’t know is that you’ve gone and changed the value from the value WPF has to something else again.
If you do the notification in a separate message then WPF will process it outside the context of the current data binding operation and will thus pick up the change:
This assumes your view model has access to the
Dispatcher. An example of how to do so is shown in my blog post on a baseViewModelclass.