@Asheh I have legacy code the reads external data into a dictionary, then in a method pulls the data out of the dictionary with about a hundred different calls with various keys. This code runs on a remote machine that I can't debug on, so all I have is event viewer logs containing the stack trace when a key is not found (because of bad external data). and for political reasons I can't deploy what I need to get line numbers in the stack trace
so finding which line threw the KeyNotFound exception is ugly
but that isn't a rule - so if it doesn't appear to be inheriting.. its possible that the ControlTemplate doesn't have a TemplateBinding on that property
(something that you can fix yourself by creating a copy of ControlTemplate and adding the TemplateBinding yourself)
I have a range class and I am resisting the urge to make a decimal type conversion operator so that I can say range = 1.10 instead of range = new Range(1,10)
R# FTW again. just bit the bullet and switched out a UniformGrid for a Grid. Went to the last cell in the grid, added Grid.Row and Grid.Column attributes and R# added all the row and column definitions for me
then told R# to fix all missing row and column attributes in scope and it put in place holder attributes for me and all I had to do was changed the 0s to the real row/column nos. Sweet!
I remember my first roguelike (in C, 1985 or so). Spending a week and a half on a bug with weird characters on my screen, which turned out to be a '<=' in a for loop instead of a '<', in completely unrelated code in another part of the system
if you need focus and selection, you probably want a list control, dropdown behavior you want a combobox, just display of readonly data, an ItemsControl is usually sufficient