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00:09
lol
I'm just wondering now how this method should be called..I was thinking from the constructor of the VM but when I type _loginObj. the method loginInit doesn't show in available methods.
must be missing something
@Jeremy
@BrianJ gist?
coming up
@Jeremy
okay wait, initLogin is a method in the VM not the model..
Yeah
but even this doesn't work:
public HomeViewModel(UserLoginModel login)
{

_loginObj = login;

//need to invoke initLogin() here
initLogin();



}
@Jeremy
initLogin takes a parameter
00:22
oh yeah the NavigationEventArgs e from the WBrowser_OnNavigated in my view's code behind, perhaps I should call the method from my code behind instead?
hmm
@Jeremy
Maybe? It's hard to tell without seeing your entire solution or knowing what your solution is trying to do.
The browser navigated event is supposed to call the code in initLogin, which I have added in my view's code behind at the moment, as I don't know how to call the method from the VM:

https://gist.github.com/BrianJVarley/147cdc7342035705491c
@BrianJ I'd modify initLogin to take a different parameter
okay quitting time, pick this up tomorrow..
and have WBrowser_OnNavigated parse out the URL and pass it to initLogin
Then you can call initLogin on your VM where you need to
00:30
@Jeremy I'll save that info for tomorrow, thanks for the advice
It's possible you don't want arguments for initLogin at all
Just have WBrowser_OnNavigated call initLogin() if the URI is a match
okay so take out the url code from the method itself and deal with that in the navigated event then?
Oh - looks like you have some duplicated code
I'll have to pick this up tomorrow, getting late, thanks, bye
Sure
 
8 hours later…
08:35
hi everybody
anybody has experience in using xctk:DataGrid ?
I would like to have a DataGrid in which there is some dependency between properties...for example I have a Property A (boolean), B and C. If A is true, B must be shown, else if A is false, C must be shown
08:49
2
Q: Different default sorting order for columns in Silverlight DataGrid

ImpworksIn my Silverlight application, I have a DataGrid that shows a list of projects. It is data-bound to a custom ObservableCollection which implements ICollectionView to provide SortDescription's. When the user clicks on a header, the data is sorted by this column in ascending order. Most users expe...

 
6 hours later…
14:48
@FrancescoDS So what's the problem?
hi again @Jeremy
Good morning
mornin
afternoon
I'm wondering how I can replace calls to set UI elements to hidden and visible, using this code, to MVVM?

/*
WBrowser.Visibility = Visibility.Hidden;
TBInfos.Visibility = Visibility.Visible;
*/
someone suggested using a Bool to Visibility Converter
15:13
you could just bind to a property of type Visibility
and raise the appropriate INPC events
thats what ive done anyway
@BrianJ If there's a property on your VM that is logically determining the visibility property of a UIElement, then I would suggest binding the visibility property of that UIElement to that (boolean) property on the VM, and using the BooleanToVisibility converter.
why use the converter Jeremy?
If there's already a boolean property that he wants to bind to, there's no need to create another property on the VM
@MarkW because of the exact reason Reed told him yesterday
I was just about to say that, that would be the only reason I would get converters involved
15:15
16 hours ago, by Reed Copsey
ie: the VM really should never have anything "System.Windows" used inside of it (which includes Visibility)
bah
purists
not even
the VM isnt portable imho
sure it is
lol only if you have multiple WPF applications that only differ in the GUI
15:16
In my experience, MVVM looks more like MVVMVMVMVMVMVM
which I have a hard time imaging a situation with that
or something
Boy do I like my proxy and aggregate patterns
okay better look into using a converter then
I'm just a bit confused as to the steps in setting it up.
^ lol
first I created a bool property in my VM
then set that bool to true within the initLogin(), where the visibility code was called.
15:22
(not laughin at you Brian, laughing at Converters)
not that they dont have their place... but using them to keep Visibility references out of your VM is just silly
but im a blasphemer, and should not be listened to :D
Nobody's a purist... :)
fair enough, bit confused as to where to start with this..
I think it would be easier for now, just to go with binding
not getting an good examples on the converter
this seems perfect:

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/10607548/wpf-bind-usercontrol-visibility-to-a-property
its pretty strait forward
just set up a window resource of the converters type
write the class to do the conversion
then set the converter property of the control with the binding that requires the converter
I would whole heartedly agree with NETscape and reedbot that if you have an existing boolean field which will determine the visibility... use a converter on that field
dont double up using a Visibility type property
if you dont, just bind to Visibility, imho
15:29
okay I'll have a look into the converter then, as I have a boolean property already set up in my VM
true = visible, false = collapsed using that converter
okay I need to set one to be visible and the other to be hidden, ie when the login code is executed within the method., straight after the browser is hidden and text block is shown.
So you need false = visible, true = collapsed for one?
VMs should use mostly native types, and native types usually exist in all languages, so in theory you should be able to port your MVVM application to another platform easily. Using Visibility will mean it took you the time to write that code, and when you port it to non-windows, you'd have to change it to bool anyways.
INotifyPropertyChanged invalidates that argument.
15:32
@Jeremy yeah exactly
if your VM leverages the WPF framework, to work with WPF, its gotta be used in a WPF environment
@BrianJ Heh, then I think you need to write a better boolean to visibility converter
@NETscape okay well that's a good motivator to implement it then.
@MarkW not really, because all you would need on another platform is a function to call which raises the platforms UI notification
so youre gunna have to modify your source
which means the VM isnt portable
15:41
sure it is... all your objects are following an interface
since they all follow an interface, all you have to do is change what happens when they call the property changed event, which would be in one place... rather than having to change every place you used System.Windows.Visibility
funny how something so simple , can cause a debate like this
made me realize that I have to think through my choice of implementation better.
and MVVM is derived from MVC, aka every web design pattern, so going from MVVM to MVC should be easier than going from something like WinForms to web
but it doesnt justify being so purist oriented with your VM
yeah I was against using wpf at first for my project, but starting to like it.
one way or the other
your VM ISNT portable outside of a WPF application without code changes
MVVM is designed to work with a very small number of API's
silverlight and WPF especially
and it find it hard to imagine having multiple applications which are using the same framework API, but only differ in their GUI
so the reuse you get out of a VM is limited
I could be wrong, but thats how I see it
which is why I dont take the time to do things like, bend over backwards to appease the MVVM pattern with dialogs
I open dialogs directly from my VM
15:47
you monster
Just kidding. I do that too.
and if I need to port that code, ill have to make code changes... in the same way I would have had to to replace INotifyPropertyChanged and whatnot
lol
validation!
youre my new best friend Jeremy
I know it's "wrong"/"impure"
But I still do it sometimes when it's not worth the legwork to do something cleaner
I feel like we should be huddled in the corner, wearing our black capes with our red lightsabres
heavy breathing 'Come to the dark side NETScape"
Just as long as you don't bind to your DM, I guess we can be friends.
okay so back to the question , I should use a boolconverter for my implementation?
15:49
in your case yes Brian
@BrianJ Yeah, but you'll have to think about how you want to handle the case where you want to invert the converter
You can use an InverseBoolean converter
inside of the BooleanToVisibility converter, if you like
so you're just chaining them
you mean setting one element to visible and the other to hidden at the same time?
Yeah
Based on the same VM property
like I have an WPF app here that directs people pushing cart around a warehouse...
it will display arrows either left or right to indicate what side of the isle the product is on that they need to grab
if the product is on the left, an arrow appears on the left, and a picture of the product appears on the right, where the right facing arrow would have been
and vice versa
the visibility properties of both are set on the same event
@MarkW ofc not, porting anything will, but a design can help with the amount of refactoring someone has to do when porting
15:53
okay I'm gonna start this now
that is certainly true netscape, and I would be foolish to not agree
@MarkW uhh, windows phone? you know, microsofts smart phone.
we dont talk about windows phone around here
its a punishable crime to mention its name
@BrianJ You have options: create a visibility property for each, create another boolean property, chain converters, or write a "better" boolean to visibility converter
take your WPF app. turn it into a web app. okay port to silver light UI.... okay now you need a mobile app? okay redesign UI.
15:55
my college has two modules dedicated to app development for this phone..
lol
Some options are "better" than others... ;)
I see your points NETScape, I do, I just disagree with your cost/benefit analysis of a purist approach to MVVM
:)
@MarkW no, because if you used a IDialogService, you'd just change your CustomDialog class to call a platform specific toast notification, rather than change every instance you used Windows.Forms.MessageDialog.Show(...)
@Jeremy I could just create two boolean properties
as you suggested
I'd suggest not doing that, since it's redundant, but it'd be a quick way to get things working
And there's some value in doing that
15:57
@MarkW then why choose WPF over WinForms?
because it has magnificent visuals, the GUI is easier to setup, and the binding features of the framework that facilitate 99% of my work make ti worthwhile
IDialogService does not
of course, don't follow it for small/simple applications, but talking about a large maintainable/scalable app...
to use it to what fits your needs... but teaching the impure form vs pure form is a bad practice IMO. mark, you know the reason as to why using visibility in VM is wrong. telling someone to just use visibility and not telling them why kinda gives them a false sense of knowledge
imagine Brian in an interview, and is asked, "according to pure mvvm, is including system.windows in VM for a wpf app against purity? why?"
you can answer that when you know the purist ideology, and you can answer any questions about impurities; however you can't answer questions about purity when you don't know it to begin with.
okay so my final conclusion on this is to use boolconverter, no visibility in the VM
now to get started
procrastination
@BrianJ it should be simple. don't over think it. use google as a resource. this have been the 2nd or 3rd day you've asked about Bool2Vis and it should only take 2 minutes to write (after you initially learn how to do it).
16:24
@NETscape following this atm: wpftutorial.net/ValueConverters.html
should help
16:34
right. that is your converter... the property in your VM should be a simple VM property, like most view model properties. private bool _isVisible; public bool IsVisible { get { return _isVisible; } set { _isVisible = value; RaisePropertyChanged(); } }
you can use two converters and one property, or one converter and two properties in your case...
WBrowser.Visibility = Visibility.Hidden;
TBInfos.Visibility = Visibility.Visible;
since you're doing ^ at the same time, that means some action probably took place (IsLoginSuccessful). If you create a public bool IsLoginSuccessful property, then you would use a BoolToVisibility converter and you'd create a BoolToNotVisibility converter, and use them on WBrowser and TBInfos
I'm going to go with one convertor and two properties, this is the converter I just set up:

https://gist.github.com/BrianJVarley/bf3b3edb83d251419435
I made it clear NETscape that I could be wrong, and im not really advocating for anyone to not understand the tools they are working with. Im simply pointing out that the justification for having to do extra work to accomplish something in a manner than fits the MVVM model (like dialogs in particular) is based on a flimsy pretense at best
<Browser x:Name="WBrowser" Visibility="{Binding IsLoginSuccessful, Converter={StaticResource Bool2Vis}}" />
<Infos x:Name="TBInfos" Visibility="{Binding IsLoginSuccessful, Converter={StaticResource Bool2NotVis}}" />
not that my opinions are anything more than opinions
youre definitely write from an academic point of view, but I find it curious that a guy who finds it hard to get the time to write unit test gets so defensive about violating MVVM slightly for the sake of efficiency in a only 'kinda sorta portable' view model
well its a model/design practice for a reason, they don't base the practice of flimsy pretenses. in fact the service pattern is used in a lot of languages/design patterns/frameworks--so the dialogs dilemma isn't even a MVVM thing, its the fact its a dependency issue.
16:43
not using the Visibility type in a VM because its technically a type associated with GUI is flimsy at best
youre not gunna convince me otherwise of that one
its in the .NET framework
so if you got .NET you got visibility
MVVM just tries to create separation. You shouldn't need to use a controls library/dependency in places that only have application and business logic. application logic doesn't define UI, so why include UI dependencies?
@NETscape so the better way to do it, is create one bool property then set up two convertor classes.
where each converter will be the inverse of the other.
okay that sounds easy now that I see some code examples of it.
pure MVVM is a great idea on paper, but not so much when implementing necessarily. that doesn't make MVVM not great though. minimizing dependencies is never a bad thing imo
@BrianJ that's one option. I mean, you don't want to create a IsLoginNotSuccessful, IsLoginSuccessful... that would be ugly. Rather just create a property that represents the result of one task, and have your UI react accordingly.
creating a inverse converter is a good idea because it can be reused anywhere in your xaml in you so choose.
yeah sounds like a good plan @NETscape
@NETscape so I've created my two converter classes, set up my bool property, but when I bind the visibility of my browser. It gives me a BoolToVisibilityConverter could not be resolved although it is a class in solution
17:00
@BrianJ show xaml
you need to follow directions more carefully
> First thing you need to do is to map the namespace of your converter to a XAML namespace. Then you can create an instance of a value converter in the resources of the view and give it a name. Then you can reference it by using {StaticResource}
<Window.Resources>
    <l:BoolToVisibilityConverter x:Key="converter" />
</Window.Resources>
okay the name space
missed that
where do I get the namespace from though?
17:05
it should be the namespace you put your converter in.
okay yeah the Home namespace then
@NETscape so I've added my namespace and resources, but I'm getting an error at resources: "the member resources is not recognised" and "the type l:BoolToVisibilityConverter was not found"
okay, figure it out.
you're reading past small details
there are reasons you define a namespace by name in xaml.
do you expect something like this to work:
int i = 0;
myInteger += 1;
so you can access the members of that namespace yes.
no because you haven't declared myInteger
but I don't see what step I've missed, create convertor class, add namespace where convertor is contained to the view, add resources, set static reference in the binding
which step did I miss here?
okay the first one is because it should be UserControl. not Window.
17:29
:21600034 do you expect something like this to work:
Xmlns local;
l.BoolToVisibilityConverter
oka so it should be ` xmlns:l="clr-namesapce:MyoTestv4.Home" `
as 'l' is being referenced not local
but this still hasn't worked
saying it doesn't exist in the namespace
although I've added the Home namespace to the View
okay. still, details.
you're defining a resource by key, so you should be referencing the resource using a key.
yes like this: ` x:Key="converter"`
I'm not very familiar with this referencing
by referencing you mean this line?
xmlns:l="clr-namesapce:MyoTestv4.Home"
I tired xmlns:converter="clr-namesapce:MyoTestv4.Home"
no avail
17:47
okay. think.
just think. and read. and think. its part of being a developer.
you're giving it a key name to reference
and you're going to need to use that resource somewhere
but where?
you need to reference that resource when you need to use it
so, when you need to use the resource, use name (key) you gave it to reference it.
if you tell me your name is Brian, i'm not going to call you Mike.
if the resource's name is converter, don't try to use it by using the resources type name
> Visibility="{Binding LoggedIn, Converter={StaticResource BoolToVisibilityConverter}}"
morning
I wish I could say that to every new developer
thinking is important.
Thinking is for managers
Then why do they rarely do that?
18:04
okay
trying to get my head around this.
lol nice bradley
okay so I should rename my key to BoolToVisibilityConverter instead and reference the same
standard practice for converters is to give them a key that is the same or similar to their class name
so yes...
@BrianJ in short, the x:Key and the StaticResource need to be the same.
you could have done StaticResource converter if you really wanted to
which is what I've done in my updated gist:
1)added namespace, ` xmlns:l="clr-namesapce:MyoTestv4.Home" `

2)declared resources. `<UserControl.Resources>
<l:BoolToVisibilityConverter x:Key="BoolToVisibilityConverter" />
</UserControl.Resources>`

3)` <WebBrowser Name="WBrowser" Navigated="WBrowser_OnNavigated" Visibility="{Binding LoggedIn, Converter={StaticResource BoolToVisibilityConverter}}" />
`
key and static resource match
but the line ` <l:BoolToVisibilityConverter x:Key="BoolToVisibilityConverter" />
`
states that BoolToVisibilityConverter doesn't exist in the namespace
@NETscape
@BradleyDotNET
18:20
Did you build?
That intellisense is massively broken
Has never worked, even once, for me without building first.
yeah rebuilt but same errors
Does it match your class name?
This kind of goes back to the thinking thing....
hmmm
I think the way I've declared my name space is incorrect
this is the namespace of the class where the converter resides: namespace MyoTestv4.Home
and this is the namespace declaration in the view
thats right then
it didn't say it couldn't find the namespace though
xmlns:l="clr-namesapce:MyoTestv4.Home"
18:24
just that the class doesn't exist in it
What is the class name for the converter?
BoolToVisibilityConverter
hastebin the file that booltovis converter is in
Not public
18:28
goes back to the rule you said about public and binding
If you want to access something, anything in XAML, it pretty much has to be public
In this case, has nothing to do with binding
but the class does have to be public
yeah marking it public didn't remove the errors
build it, and run it
Navigated="WBrowser_OnNavigated" should also probably not be there... you're not using that event anymore
done that but get the same errors:

http://hastebin.com/catogixovu.tex
Heh, TeX syntax highlighting
18:32
I'll be back in two hours
bye
have to go somewhere
send xaml
@BrianJ you're bool to visibility converter should be in the same namespace as your view
or
you have to define the xmlns different if its in a different project
do you have multiple projects?
Having a Common.WPF is a good idea :P
18:48
@Jeremy I still have not decided on if I should flag that.
18:59
Why would you flag that?
And I agree, a library of your common WPF type controls, converters, etc. is a good idea
@BradleyDotNET :)
19:29
@JohanLarsson Be my guest. I felt some kind of angst when I wrote it, but I'm not sure it even means anything... :)
haha
it was clearly offensive :)
@JohanLarsson Well I didn't/don't want to offend anyone.
Hello guys
Hi @Redaa
Hi bradley
Why is the WPF room so empty :D
Anyone can guide me for how to get a slider with double values like in this image :
http://cdn.marketplaceimages.windowsphone.com/v8/images/9f6c8de8-0048-4c2d-9bec-a62018ecebe4?imageType=ws_screenshot_large&rotation=90
I'm thinking of two slider one on top of one , but i wonder if there is any other "Proper solution"
19:39
it would clearly be custom
at which point you could make the two values slide together
your best bet would probably be to override the current slider control template
hmm, yeah selecting the first will result in value change for the other, you're right
so I guess i'll just create a custom control :/
or 1 slider, 2 controls that drag
Thanks for your answers guys, is there any tutorial that i can follow ?
not that I'm aware of
once you get past the basics, tutorials kind of go away :)
20:36
so @Bradley, I am thinking one Mailman for each connection (Socket/SerialPort), and each mailman runs on its own thread. How can I update UI from separate thread? event notification?
should i user backgroundworker, or Thread, orrrr?
Well you can use Task/BW/Thread to get the work offloaded
and then an event is a pretty reasonable way to notify the VM that new data is there
21:05
mhmmm
nope the same project, using the wrong namespace, I should really listen to my errors :P @NETscape
Thats a good idea
Hello everyone
Hi @akirti
I m not able to understand 1 thing in my MVVM code that I ve separated my cluttered RIA service code in a another class. I passed a Property of my view model in service method where I wrote RIA client code and query the data from Service , finally Assigned it to this method passed arg
Data is coming But UI its not reflecting
I think Its a UI thread Issue
21:19
what does your property look like in your VM
Hi @ BRandley
hello @ NetScape
public class SectionHeadToolsViewModel : ViewModelBase, ISectionHeadToolsViewModel{
/// <summary>
/// Holder for Group Combo Box
/// </summary>
private ObservableCollection<Group> _itemGroupsSource;
public ObservableCollection<Group> ItemGroupsSource
{
get
{

return _itemGroupsSource;
}
set
{
_itemGroupsSource = value;
OnPropertyChanged(()=>ItemGroupsSource);

}
}

}
and Service Code
public class ItemHeadDaoService : ViewModelBase{
public void LoadGroups(ObservableCollection<Group> ItemsGroupSource, User user, bool isBusy)
{
isBusy = true;
ObservableCollection<Group> Items=null;
EntityQuery<Group> query = null;
EntityQuery<Usergroup> userGroupQuery = null;
query = this.context.GetGroupsQuery().Where(x => x.Status == "A");
if (user != null)
{
if (user.Role == "A")
{
userGroupQuery = this.context.GetUsergroupsQuery();
}
else
{
userGroupQuery = this.context.GetUsergroupsQuery().Where(x => x.Userid == user.Userid);
I initialize my service in ToolsViewModel and Tried to load my UI
HeadDaoService = new ItemHeadDaoService();
HeadDaoService.LoadGroups(ItemGroupsSource, new User() { Userid = "hpmsadmin" }, IsBusy);
HeadDaoService.LoadDefaultItemmaster(ItemmasterSource, IsBusy);
you should really put that in something like gist.github.com
Yeah, thats a lot of code. Also try to narrow down the issue a little bit
I'm still not sure I've created the correct name space from the class that holds my convertor..
the name space of the class is this: namespace MyoTestv4.Home
and the name space I made for the xaml is : xmlns:l="clr-namesapce:MyoTestv4.Home"
does that match up?
for some reason then the code behind of the view is : namespace MyoTestv4
no . whatever
at the end
lol "-namesapce"
21:35
Is it in a folder?
VS automatically appends folder names to the namespace when it creates a class
yes its in the Home folder
fixing that spelling error didn't change anything
That explains the differing namespaces then
@BradleyDotNET this is the GitHub repo of my project, can you see any reason why the name space isn't working?

https://github.com/BrianJVarley/G00290342_MYO_Test_2
Nothing looks obviously wrong. I take it you are getting the same errors?
yeah
21:49
Now that you've built, if you try re-typing the resource line, does intellisense come up?
okay I just changed the namespace
then changed it back
and hey presto
:D
huh
restarting does fix most problems :)
zero errors
turn it off and turn it on again lol
I suggested using intellisense, btw, because it will show you if you have a typo or it isn't seeing the class in the namespace for some reason
yeah that's what fixed it really
so to set this converter up, what other steps do I need to do, just set the bool to true where I had the visibility code place in my login method?
21:54
Yep
this is the VM then:

https://gist.github.com/BrianJVarley/806ebe98d4606246dc5e

and the converter: https://gist.github.com/BrianJVarley/bf3b3edb83d251419435

Can you spot any flaws with the way I have it implemented?
@BrianJ Its not type safe
bind to anything but a bool and you'll get exceptions
Otherwise both look good
@akirti Thank you for moving it to a gist. Its awfully long though, and you need to indicate where you are having trouble
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