@Markus in your case there's no difference but if you have change notification enabled you really want to do things after your controls have been created through InitializeComponent
I've had times when my changes weren't being picked up or even main window not being created when I tried to do stuff before initializecomponent
To me it just seem a little hard to know what happends first, I mean since it's not updatable anyway I thought it was important that the variable was set before the wpf was loaded
Here's a thing I never understood... it seems like with different containers (grid, stackpanel, dockpanel, etc) have different influences on the content's size. in some the controls get's stretched and in other they don't. what is the pattern?
back.. yes I wan't to stretch all my (two) controls. I'm trying a grid right now
By the way, on the way I got in to a different (more important) question. First time starting any wpf it takes ages! is there anything to be done about this?
honestly I'm quite amazed that Microsoft doesn't include this in windows in some way... One could think that it's in there interest that c# apps starts in a reasonable time!
maybe you have some wpf app load at startup which does the stuff for you. and as you say it, I don't have the problem on my computer either. Although it's a lot faster than the users computer who had the problem
This scaling thing.... So If I place two ListViews in a ScrollView, then they resize to fill the scrollview. However if I add a StackPanel into the ScrollView (into which I locate my ListViews) then the ListViews get the smallest possible size (at least height)
can I get the StackPanel to fill the ScrollViewer as the two list did?
sorry! the two list are also located in a grid to separate them.