I then have three functions which follow this pattern, emphasizing one Row or another:
this.RowHeight_Blue.Height = new GridLength(58, GridUnitType.Star); this.RowHeight_White.Height = new GridLength(20, GridUnitType.Star); this.RowHeight_Orange.Height = new GridLength(20, GridUnitType.Star);
On my main display are two Shift buttons, one orange and one blue, and their job is to make all of the buttons 'Orange mode' or 'Blue mode' or 'White mode' (by hitting one of those buttons a second time)
So a way I could make that happen is to change the RowDefinitions above to have Height="{Binding RowHeight_Blue}", for example
Then have my blue shift button call a method that makes RowHeight_Blue 58* and the others 20*. RowHeight_Blue, of course, being a public property on my MainPageVM
I'd like to keep my layout encapsulated in my UC if I can, does that make sense?
But if I understand what you're saying correctly, they'd be something like Height="{StaticResource BlueRowHeight}" and then in Page.Resources, I can do <Style TargetType="RowDefintion"> and use a Setter that has a bound value?
I'm interested in trying it both ways. If I can get conversant with several techniques for any given problem, then I can get good at this stuff. I really like having you two with your different approaches, as it really enhances my understanding. =)
So thanks for that!
In that DP changed callback, the parameters are: (DependencyObject d, DependencyPropertyChangedEventArgs e)
The DepObj is, what the UserControl itself, or the DP that's being changed?
Nevermind, looks like the second param is really what I want to be looking at
if i had a grid on my form, who's row heights changed based on a button press, then i would put the height of the rows on the view model that the grid is bound to
You wouldn't pull out a VM and drop a new one in there IMO. Instead you'd pull out a View and drop a view on top of the VM. You can test the VMs + Ms, you can't test the Vs and VMs
Totally something that I'll be 100% required to have in here in the end, so I really appreciate the tip! You would have heard about it from me before long otherwise... =)
right, which i could agree with. but I think Bradley prefers using animations and what not, maybe even goes as far to say he is creative. On the other hand, I would bind that ish right to the view model as well and call snapping good enough haha
if you bind a height, then you have to change it, and probably code behind some animation features? Why not just use visualstatemanager w/ a bool which will change the heights of your grid rows
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I can't tell you how happy I was the moment I hit my orange shift buttons and all my buttons went to orange mode. Like holy carp, it worked the first time?!?
I'm up for pushing my boundaries, but maybe my best approach right now is to do it with like hardcoded values and then move to the next level of complication from there
Is writing one the 'animate a transform' thing that @JohanLarsson was talking about?
Nothing built in I can find, here's some examples: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/3181139/animating-grid-column-or-grid-row-in-xaml http://stackoverflow.com/questions/17265067/changing-grid-columns-rows-width-height-by-storyboard-animation-in-windows-sto http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2017448/how-to-change-the-height-of-a-grid-row-in-wpf-using-storyboard
Maybe this is a kick-the-can-down-the-road moment. My final implementation won't actually have 3 strings, it'll have 3 drawn glyphs that will look an awful lot like strings
For the non-symbol characters at least
And those glyphs were developed by someone else and he told me that he'd figured out the sizing and maybe the animation on them too
I'm going to be cracking that open on Monday and seeing what's inside
Darn, thought I was going to go a whole day without VS taking. Nope
BTW - I think you can animate star sizing in WPF, but you have to do it in code - but as long as the GridLength.GridUnitType is set to star, animating the Value property should work (and keep it star sized)
but agree with Bradley - if you keep them vector graphics, it becomes much simpler
@BradleyDotNET Yeah - you'd just have to not use the GridLength markup extensions in your xaml, so you could set the star sizing type directly - but it'd be ugly ;)
Like for example I have a bunch of processor classes, say one of them transforms a string, and my setting is how much padding to add to the string. But another processor does something else like convert the string to another format and the setting is what format to convert to.