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10:30
Hi guys.
I am trying to create a HeaderTemplate for a Slider control. This works fine, but I can't figure out how I can bind the Text property of a TextBlock inside the HeaderTemplate to the Value-property of the Slider. How can I get the right Source in my general Slider style?
10:56
Hi @ThomasClemensen, what's a header template ? Are you modifiying the Slider's Template to add a header inside of it ?
To display it's current value ?
I am setting a DataTemplate inside <Setter Property="HeaderTemplate"> for a Style with TargetType=Slider. I have a TextBlock inside the DataTemplate. The Text property of the TextBlock would I like to bind to the Value property of the Slider.
I am working an Windows Store app btw. I should probably have mentioned that earlier :)
Is it a WPF project ? WPF Slider's doesn't seem to have a HeaderTemplate property
oh you just answered that
I've never developped windows store apps but maybe you can try RelativeSource TemplatedParent to get the slider's value
I have tried that, but it seems like it tries to access the Value property on a ContentPresenter type if I use the TemplatedParent :/
11:11
ok
I think you have to set the Header property of the slider
I have done that. And I am binding that value to another TextBlock by using {Binding}. That works fine, but I just can't figure out how to bind to the Value property.
<Slider Header="{Binding Value, RelativeSource={RelativeSource self}}"/>
Ah okay. But I am using the Header property to actually displaying a header TextBlock, so that would just cause another problem :/
a header textblock containing text other than the value ?
This is what I am doing:
`<Style TargetType="Slider">
<Setter Property="HeaderTemplate">
<Setter.Value>
<DataTemplate>
<Grid>
<Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<ColumnDefinition Width="*" />
<ColumnDefinition Width="Auto" />
</Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<TextBlock Foreground="{StaticResource GrayTextBrush}" Text="{Binding}" FontFamily="{StaticResource LightFont}" FontWeight="Light" Margin="{StaticResource ListHeaderMargin}" Grid.Column="0" />
<TextBlock Text="{Binding Path=Value}" Grid.Column="1" Width="40" TextAlignment="Right" FontFamily="{StaticResource RegularFont}" FontWeight="Bold" FontSize="12" />
11:19
ok
maybe you can bind the parent object to the slider's header property
Hmn, that might do it. I'll try that. Just a second.
and retrieve the slider's value via the viewmodel
if you have any, or whatever object is used as datacontext
Hmn, the Header value is actually a static string written in the XAML as it is now.
so you may not need to pass it via binding ?
Yes, because I have many different sliders with different header-titles. But they all need to bind the other textblock to the value of the slider.
11:29
<Slider Header="{Binding Value, RelativeSource=...self, StringFormat={StaticResource FirstHeaderFormat}}" />
But that wouldn't allow me to have the header and the value in two different textblocks, would it?
nope :p
maybe you can just do :
<Slider><Slider.Header><Grid><TextBlock...
I need it to be a Style, because I have a lot of Slider controls.
I have created a real question here: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/29231721/binding-to-slider-value-inside-headertemplate-in-style

I appreciate your help, though. Feel free to post an answer, if you come up with a solution :)
One solution would be to have the viewmodel expose the header's text
But I have multiple Slider controls for the same view model, so that wouldn't be a good solution.
11:47
you may need one viewmodel per slider
11:57
@ThomasClemensen In fact I think there's a design problem in what you're trying to achieve (in the way you're trying to achieve it). The header shouldn't have knowledge of weither it's in a Slider or any other control.
You do have a point. I'll try to work around it in another way. Thank you.
 
4 hours later…
15:53
heyyo
yohey
yehoy
what's up
16:19
wrestling wtih nginx - fastcgi-mono-server - owin combo :(
mono refuses to work without a file
morning all
Morning
o/
Nevada, ah? sigh
I can only imagine the temps that you're having..
you guys should move to warmer sides.. like UK :P
oop
morning brad
is brad ok, or do you prefer bradley?
how can yo uget Mac and Win OS to fileshare
like, at a native level... if possible?
16:33
Native.. you mean, like smb?
yeah i think... lol
Yep, what @franssu said.
someone tried explaining to me what WINS was and mentioned that's how you get Mac and Win to talk, but i just looked it up and that doesn't sound... modern if it is even accurate
WINS is essentials dns for windows.
16:35
right, which made me think, wtf?
It's for the netbios protocol.
i finally got around to googling this after 2 years lol
@LynnCrumbling Not too bad right now
@NETscape I prefer bradley, but... I'm used to it :(
@BradleyDotNET We're in the high 30's/low 40's. Wish it was warmer.
16:39
Its nearly 50 already :)
though I'd prefer it didn't get quite so hot in the summer
@BradleyDotNET There's very little humidity, though... right?
not a problem. thought i would ask! as you wish sir bradley!
alright, who is ready for WPFness?
shoot!
okay, so. I'm wondering what you guys might think is the "best way." I inherited some ugly code and it happens to be broke, so i'm wondering if i go through the trouble of fixing it, or doing it a better way. So here it goes...
-1 vote -- too broad a question!
16:44
it's dealing with RowDetails (in particular with Telerik's GridView)
Some rows in my gridview are considered "Visual Parameters"
and there are three different "kinds"
A, B, C
each rows datacontext is ParameterViewModel
@LynnCrumbling Yeah, next to none 99% of the time
Wait... Does each row have it's own instance of a viewmodel?
That doesn't sound right.
sounds ugly right off the bat...
16:47
Hrmm. Perhaps you should just start from scratch.
..might be faster... depends on the size of the codebase..
Do you really need a 3rd party control?
wait, wut
What do these third party grids bring to the table that you can't otherwise do with a datatemplate?
Technically, my ParameterViewModel is a model with INPC
its a wrapper to the info in my COM object.
Each row is it's own parameter...
INotifyPropertyChanged?... the foundation of MVVM
Google for INPC-: Indiana Network for Patient Care
hahaha
what MVVMLight hides from you :p
16:50
Quick! Get rid of the evidence.
anyways... GridView is very robust and offers a lot of options, and datagrid sucks... no reason to rewrite a control that we have a license for... we use other telerik controls too
@BradleyDotNET explain
<telerik:GridView ItemsSource="{Binding Parameters}"
I thought they were all separate view models
what do you mean
I think you are ok with the model wrapper
ahh
okay
16:52
@BradleyDotNET yep, this
so, we all on the same page now?
I would also avoid 3rd party controls, but like you said, you already shelled out the license bucks
17:12
20 messages moved to Trash can
you could likely use a converter passing in an argument that tells it which location to flip
i'm guessing you're using Flags enum at the backend
a simple bit shift via argument and then flag masking should do it
nope :(
so what are you you using then?
have an array?
is it anything indexable?
if the answer is no, fix that -- use a wrapper table and then you can use the above
basically its a UserControl with a int Value property... when the person clicks "Apply" it just sets parameter.VisualValue = userControl.Value;
and they manage to break the entire gridview when they call DataContext = this; in the user control after the control is loaded lol
int value can still be treated as bit mask
17:21
i agree with what you're saying Mav, no doubt... just thought i'd see what everyone had to say... then i realized my explanation is kinda shitty
well that's what i have to say :P
thank you :)
i just decided to spam some since you moved 20 messages out without a reply
bad spam is better than no spam at all.. i always say :p
spam, yuck
17:50
lol. anyone read reddit yesterday
apparently spam is super popular in hawaii
probably a lot cheaper than shipping/raising the animals
canada is mac and cheese country of the world
hawaii is spam
probably find it all over the US
i just got the best internet package ive ever had
250 mb/s down , no cap, 75$ a month
curious what you guys pay
pure genius
i think i have 12mb/s down, $65... -_-
17:59
sigh
really????
yikes
yes, really
data rates here are stupid
@BradleyDotNET how should i pick the contain to put things in?
i.e. Grid or Border... both... work? Border with no thickness
@NETscape In general, you pick the one that gives you the right layout :)
Grid for stuff that looks like a grid
@BradleyDotNET That reply was a bit... abrasive.. (theirs, not yours)
StackPanel for when you need stuff next to each other
DockPanel for resizing type stuff
@LynnCrumbling You mean the "You didn't tell me where it was"?
yeah
18:10
Yeah.
use a grid if you need rows and columns
a border is literally just a border
Border can contain a grid of course
yo dawg
pretty much never use Canvas ;)
 
3 hours later…
21:00
oi
@BradleyDotNET I have a UC that I've added DependencyProperties to. the code i inherited had a IsModified property... and after they did "initializing" they did this.DataContext = this; in the UC
and on the UC they had a button IsEnabled bound to IsModified
now the UC (a datatemplate) persists its datacontext correctly, so i don't do this.DataContext = this;
how should i control IsEnabled on the button now? codebehind?
The IsEnabled - wouldn't you control that via the RelayCommand's CanExecute?
(Assuming the button gets wired up to RelayCommand...)
no, its view only related... because IsModified was basically changed when user started changing thing on the UI. The user can change settings on the UI without applying them
when they hit apply, thats when i'd push the value back to the VM
21:16
Good question
you could bind to an "IsDirty" property on the real view model
and have the setters for the other properties set it
Setting it in the code-behind isn't crazy
but might be harder than it sounds
@BradleyDotNET but it won't be dirty until after the changes are applied
That depends on the UpdateSourceTrigger
lostfocus
and that's kinda irrelevant
because this control basically takes the current value and updates the control based on the state of the view model.
then the control/datatemplate should allow the user to edit the value to whatever it wants since its not bound to the VM, its just a visual representation of what you're going to try to set the value to.
when Apply button is clicked, then I would update the VM bound value
<views:MyToggleButtons ToggleValue="{Binding VmValue}" /> //<--DataTemplate
@BradleyDotNET hopefully i'm making sense
so in the UC, I store the VmValue locally to the UC and allow user to change togglebuttons
Ok, if you are storing a local copy in the view, then just set it directly
when they click apply, I could call ToggleValue = ToggleControlValue; which would update the VMs VmValue
21:26
@NETscape Seems like you'd want to store the "temp copy of changes" in the viewmodel, and on acceptance, propagate the committed changes to the model, no?
Then you'd bind your ui elements to a second set of properties that are viewmodel-specific...
Thats how I would have done it as well
i guess my vm/model does implement IEditableObject also... mhmm
@BradleyDotNET is this a reply to @NETscape's ToggleValue comment, or the vm/m propagation comment I made?
in reply to you... it makes sense
The propagation comment
data should never be stored in the view
21:29
Worse case, you throw away the viewmodel data if you need to revert to the original model data.
i also would probably argue that "multiple instances of a view model for each row in the grid" comment
from a purist point of view... if you have something like IsSelected, wouldn't that be a VM property
so one row = one view model... that's ugly?
It's reflecting the state of the view... and changes to the DP would cause the UI to update itself.
21:32
If they were all disparate
then the design sounds bad
i thought "pure" is supposed to be beautiful
but multiple instances of the same one is just fine
and its really just a DTO, not a full on view model
Of course every row is going to be represented by an object
I just misunderstood you :)
@NETscape I'm still unsure why the viewmodel wouldn't just be aware of an observableCollection<rowType>...
and "pure" is very rarely beautiful
truly beautiful designs find the balance
and in this case... now i have to add a RelayCommand to handle the intermediate value changes etc.
i guess it depends everyones' interpretation of beautiful ;)
papers in university for instance... if you're asked to write a paper following some form/style, and you stray off and start mixing in different styles... professors fk you over
but i know what you mean, and thats what counts
thanks for your guys' input. appreciated
21:38
Seems like > 80% of the questions on here are on MVVM patterning.. not WPF per se.
[including my own].
Makes sense
WPF is pretty easy to get a hold of, even XAML isn't too bad
but getting the design principles that make it awesome are much harder
Indeed. Correctly applying an mvvm pattern feels like the same skillset that I use when trying to design database structures for an application.
Should this be it's own table? Is it a 1-to-many, a many-to-many? What should the relationship be, and which table should own it?
well, thats design in general as well
Its just people are so used to WinForms designs, that they have to get their head around the good design WPF allows you to do.
I've always backed my winform applications with a model layer; that was an easy 1:1. The viewmodel was the issue.
It's making more and more sense to me now, though.
VB6 -> WPF is definitely quite the change. i love it, but hate it because i'm pressured to meet deadlines because "everything is done, it just has to be written in a different language."
21:45
Right. I can't stand writing "TextBox1.Text =" anymore :)
I'm going to attempt an implementation of Drag and Drop soon, though. That'll be interesting.
@BradleyDotNET I'm not sure what's going to happen when I have to maintain a winform app again. I may rebel and just start porting.
I had to help another company with their app (since we were interfacing to it)
Does the MVC engine work the same way?
made me want to smash it to pieces
I've never used it.
21:47
I was told "You can't do it with MVVM, because it will confuse them"
grr....
@BradleyDotNET Was it winform-based, or poorly implemented wpf?
MVC is very similar to WPF/MVVM from my understanding
That said, I haven't used it either
just done some reading
@NETscape That's a bummer. And vb6 code is effectively worth nothing in this decade :-/
21:55
i did like the first 3 courses in iTunesU
for iOS, through MITs free online courses
@BradleyDotNET I'd love to try it at some point. I can only imagine how cool it would be to have a web UI that is bindable.
and MVC understanding started to kick in
@LynnCrumbling Yeah, I usually use Angular right now for that :)
but MVC is very intriguing
More C#, less Javascript = win
user2509848
If I have a XAML control, can I change the element it binds to?
Ummm.... yes...
At runtime, or compile time?
user2509848
22:01
Runtime, I guess.
Can you give an example?
user2509848
Sure.
user2509848
Let's say I have a ListView like this:
I have a SignalR question to throw out there
22:01
Our web API is using OAuth and we connect to the hub on our WPF desktop client
it sends a token back for authentication
and the token just keeps randomly failing
user2509848
<ListView ItemsSource="{Binding ItemList}" />
@BradleyDotNET I gotta split; time to commute. Have a great night.
we use the same process in a win 8.1 RT app and it works flawlessly, it doesnt mangle the token or anything like that
user2509848
Later, I'd like to change the binding to SearchItemList
22:02
Couldn't you just set ItemList = SearchItemList?
@JTester Sorry, I wouldn't even know where to begin on that one
user2509848
No, because when I leave search mode, I want to remember where I was.
user2509848
So later, I need to set it back to ItemList
@BradleyDotNET it cool :) just figured i'd ping the room
Well, I see a couple options
user2509848
I suppose I could have a DisplayItemList...
22:03
The first would be to use a CollectionViewSource to do your filtering
the second would be what you just said
user2509848
OK.
or hold a "Master" that you do all your other ops off of
but its really the same thing, just different names
user2509848
What I am doing now, is I have one page.
is a collectionviewsource essentially a couple of the list/collection thats bound to it?
so you can independantly sort/group that collection without affecting anywhere else its referenced?
a copy**
user2509848
And I have two elements of the ones I need to change, and am setting the visibility on/off.
user2509848
22:05
I felt that wasn't proper, though, so I figured I'd ask.
@JTester To be honest, I'm not sure exactly how it implements it
but yeah, I think that's pretty close
It may just expose a query that the view can use
i noticed when i took the same collection
so it doesn't actually need a copy
and bound it to 2 collection view sources
user2509848
Thanks for the help!
22:06
i could sort them independantly
@Hosch250 Yeah, you usually don't want to do that
if i didnt use a collection view source and bind directly to the collection from the VM they would both sort at the same time
@JohanLarsson
@JTester That would work if they returned two different IEnumerables (instead of a copy)
what was that library that formated XAML properties based on importance
22:07
@NETscape baby
I think you mean xamlstyler
it is a VS-extension for formatting xaml
@JTester Of course, a copy would still work, but given the extra resource consumptions, seems the less likely of the two options
@BradleyDotNET roger that
@JohanLarsson format it so i can star it and maverik doesn't fight you
XamlStyler. A VS extension that does a good job of formatting xaml. (ctrl + k + 2)
2
job of | at?
of I think
22:13
hard one
fifth edit :)
it was @iulian3000's suggestion originally
oh, oops
don't think it is a problem
i must be doing something wrong
i like 1 attribute per line
ahhh
probbaly have to add to list
there are settings, think default is attribute per line
yeah, i changed that
but doesn't format datatrigger
<MultiDataTrigger>
    <MultiDataTrigger.Conditions>
        <Condition Binding="{Binding Path=IsReadOnly}" Value="True" />
        <Condition Binding="{Binding Path=BitValue}" Value="True" />
    </MultiDataTrigger.Conditions>
    <Setter TargetName="border" Property="Background" Value="LightGreen" />
</MultiDataTrigger>
22:22
not sure it does much in styles at all
yeah, Ctrl + K + 2, Ctrl + K + D
i was just bothered with order of attribs
it does a good job with order imo
x:Name first then width & height iirc
pretty much as I prefer it
also configurable but I try to keep things vanilla for such things
Bs if different coders have different settings. Noisy merges.
consistency is nice... and its hard to easily find attribs when there is no order
@LynnCrumbling @BradleyDotNET what i don't like about "temp values" is that when you bind them to a control that changes the value, they have a setter usually, and there is nothing stopping anyone from using Snoop and changing the temp value and exploiting the software
Thats why the UI can't be your last line of defense
22:38
i don't see how it can be prevented.
if 5 is a valid value, 5 is a valid value. the only way I could see you preventing it is checking who is actually setting value
but before you save anything off, you could check to see if thats a valid operation
ahh i see
yeah, some things clicked... i guess i have multiple lines of defense
If you are worried about an attack through Snoop or similar you basically have to put up similar defenses to a public API
yeah... not too worried now, but something i always think about
i might be a noob
but
how does this work:
yep
that explains that
wow, brainfart

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