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06:28
@MohamedAhmed PasswordBox's Password property isn't a DependencyProperty. That means you can't use it in Binding to push a user's typed password to your viewmodel in the standard MVVM way. This behavior overrides that - it exposes its own dependency property you can bind to, and updates the binding when the passwordbox's contents change.
06:55
0
Q: Changing PrinterSettings.Copies Not Working

tetralobitaI am using WPF .Net Framework 4.0 What I expect is 3 pages, but I am only getting 1 var doc = new System.Drawing.Printing.PrintDocument(); document.PrintPage += Document_PrintPage; document.Print(); private void Document_PrintPage(object sender, PrintPageEventArgs e) { e.PageSettings.Print...

07:25
Hello
08:00
any one know about html2canvas library?
08:50
Does CellEditEnding and RowEditEnding fire when I'm using DataGridTemplateColumn that has TextBox for editing ?
 
3 hours later…
11:38
Hi all
12:07
It's 2017, and is there really still no simple, easy-to-use WebView control for WPF?
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I recommend CEFSharp...
That'll add 60-80M to your install, though...
I don't want to add a new dependency to the project at this point, especially for a small feature. :-/
I'm trying to get the WebBrowser control working, but it's, of course, a pain.
I create an instance, set the value of DocumentText, it seems to work, but DocumentText stays an empty HTML block.
Ah, it seems I was using the WinForms WebBrowser control.
12:28
I could write a book on that thing...
Now it seems to layout the control properly, including the scrollviewer I put around it, but the control itself remains blank.
headdeskheaddesk
I'll see if the product guys are fine with me saving it to a temporary file and popping open a web browser. :-(
I have had this problem in the past. How do you call Navigate() method on the Control?
Right now I'm creating the control in code, so I don't have that problem. I've seen solutions with Behaviors that bind to a string and, when it changes, call Navigate/NavigatetoString on the control.
I have a full functional demo, if you need it avner
it's in c++ though.
Nah. It's such a minor feature that I'd hate to add a new dependency jsut for it, but I might have to.
12:42
(that demo is for the MS Hosted Webbrowser, btw.. not CEF)
12:54
morning all
afternoon :-)
or afternoon ;)
@LynnCrumbling is that for WPF web browser control in C++ ?
no, it's for the Winform hosted webbrowser in c++
afaik, the WPF one is a POS :)
Yeah...
I can probably host the WinForms control in an HWndHost.
If I, you know, really hate myself.
12:58
You could.
I've managed to host a DirectX video in an HwndHost once. And an instance of Notepad.exe.
Yep.. that's what I used it for.. hosting a video stream from a teleconferencing api.
Yeah. We hosted the feed from a security camera.
It was a nice hack, actually. The security camera feed was running in a separate process, but HwndHost doesn't care. An HWND is an HWND.
13:11
@LynnCrumbling I concur !!!
13:41
I conquer.
;)
hehe worldplay.
...unintended pun but i'll take it
Learned it from Simpsons... Carl has a word of the day calendar and mispronounces "Conquer" as "Concur", yet the mispronunciation is appropriate for the conversation.
i just added my extra 'l' into wordplay since i can't type today
then conquer + world....ok...i'll let myself out
Hehehe!
@Alex I, conker.
13:55
Ccleaner was injected with malware on the download sites.
Yup. Downloader beware
i've had mine installed for like...months now
so i think i'm ok
I usually download from cnet or pcworld
Don't trust the other sites
Poor CCleaner. I've been using it for years !!!
14:14
oh thanks for that share biggi - i didn't know but i usually pick up on these things quickly with my task explorer
like "hello.. i've never seen you before.. where are you running from? oh let me suspend you there for a second.. i'll brb.. delete delete.. ok all good! goodbye :)"
14:30
Yup, just something to be aware of, I know a lot of people use it.
Gah nothing sounds good to listen to today...
I have the Stones queued up atm...
Try Alex Metric - Prophecies :-)
XAM....that's not quite my style....
neitehr is stones
15:03
@biggidvs I take it you haven't played Saints Row IV then? :-)
15:16
nope, not my stye of game either
15:43
@biggidvs What's your type of a game then?
16:17
@biggidvs version 5.33 I believe. Can view it in Control Panel > Programs and Features
I had one months old as well, 5.31.
Still, 5.33 was downloaded something like 2 million times.
oh, not sure if all this info is in that link you posted... didn't click it
read it on security blog first thing when i woke up
interesting part is that the app was still signed
You guys all know about Bluebourne, by now, I'm sure...
If not, enjoy: armis.com/blueborne
16:35
yis
17:01
is it possible to use async/await with commands?
@erotavlas yes
if implementing iCommand can I make my execute method like this?
    public async void Execute(object parameter)
    {
        await this.executeMethod(parameter);
    }
yes
but make sure to put that in a try/catch
ok gonna 'try' it :)
Kcvin yup that's what I was talking about
XAML: I like all sorts of different games, CS:GO, Dota, Path of Exile, Destiny, Halo, WoW, just not big into the GTA/Saints Row games.
I finally caved and downloaded Hearthstone today so I could get the free Twitch Prime card backs (I thought they were packs) and now I think I might play a bit of it
17:15
@erotavlas As described on this page, you'd want to avoid async void: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/magazine/jj991977.aspx
a void async void, ok
@Alex That comes with a big caveat; for event handlers and UI entry points (ala ICommand) async void is OK
Ahh
yes; avoid writing it in your code/interfaces, but when dealing with the framework you don't always have a choice
Just make sure to try/catch any async void methods
In that situation, is it possible to do async Task ...?
17:24
I always used async void on event handlers
@Alex In command, no. ICommand requires a void return type
and async void on event handlers is fine
sweet
oh yeah, forgot to celebrate with you guys, i found my flash drive jammed between by seatpost and floorboard in my truck! woot
Does this make sense? (if I don't want to change the signature of my executeMethod to return a Task)
    public async void Execute(object parameter)
    {
        await Task.Run(() => { this.executeMethod(parameter); });
    }
17:32
Woohoo!
not a great pattern
Might as well just Task.Run without the await
I would change the signature personally
Maybe @ReedCopsey has a more... evidence based opinion?
Yes, not great at all, don't call task run like that, let the caller do it
Johan; caller is the UI here
so an event handler?
as in; ButtonBase
ICommand implementation
17:54
ah, ok get it now, tired
reed has a gist with async commands iirc, should be starred
Stephen Cleary has a great blog post/series + library for async commands
18:12
<ListBox HorizontalAlignment="Left" Height="150" Margin="416,0,0,0" VerticalAlignment="Top" Width="200" ScrollViewer.HorizontalScrollBarVisibility="Disabled">
            <ListBox.ItemsPanel>
                <ItemsPanelTemplate>
                    <WrapPanel Orientation="Horizontal"/>
                </ItemsPanelTemplate>
            </ListBox.ItemsPanel>
            <ListBoxItem Name="lbUserID" Content="UserID" Width="60"/>
            <ListBoxItem Name="lbComputer" Content="Computer"/>
         </ListBox>
what would be the best way to create a listbox with 2 columns?
so i can populate them with different values
You create a ListBoxItem template that has the layout that you need, with the bindings
Then you bind ItemsSource to an OC<whatevertype>
I still have not a clue what bindings are really :) i'm creating the form with XAML but powershell is doing the backend work
if you have 10 items, and want to show 2 in each column, its not that simple
you have to learn how bindings work to work with wpf, and get help from this chat
Cory, invest the time in learning bindings.. you will thank yourself 100x over.
I'm not sure if powershell can use bindings
18:15
How are you using Powershell to instantiate the form?
and uhh. why?
#==============================================================================================
# XAML Code - Imported from Visual Studio Express WPF Application
#==============================================================================================
[void][System.Reflection.Assembly]::LoadWithPartialName('presentationframework')
[xml]$XAML = @'
<Window
xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"
xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml"
xmlns:d="http://schemas.microsoft.com/expression/blend/2008"
That's not the entire xaml code, just something i was testing. but it indeed can launch the form and populate controls and what not
@ReedCopsey I found his website, but no blog post about commands, do you know where it is?
@CoryEtmund Are you opposed to trying c#?
I just don't see how anyone here can help you without it.
I'd like to figure it out in powershell yes since that's a large majority of my work. If you guys can't help thats fine :) just thought i'd give it a shot
it was either powershell with xaml, or powershell with win forms so I still see it as a small improvement at least
18:23
uhh
use the tool that gets the job done the fastest
be efficient
there's no way you can do wpf in powershell efficiently, IMO
even if you're a powershell expert
i could be wrong though
since most of the things I create are fairly simple I tend to stay in powershell. A lot of simple forms that update sql tables and retrieve info from sql tables
that's what this is but i haven't had much success with a multicolumn listbox
might have to find a workaround
learn C#/WPF, create these simple forms in minutes
Last ditch effort: You might surprise yourself at home much easier and intuitive it is to write this stuff in c#. Give it a shot. You know you want to :)
@Kcvin Ha. Minutes. I've never done any form in minutes. :P
ymmv...
haha i've done C# stuff before. did a independant study in college to learn C# and how to query against a database
took me awhile to get a hang of it
although, never did any sort of bindings
You will never want to go back once you use bindings.
18:29
a multicolumn listbox with a couple buttons would take you more than 5 minutes?
No more setting this.somefield.text
ok, probably not.
anyone have a good tutorial video for bindings?
that would work best
Cory - Why not just grab the sample project that mav did?
Actually - I have a really simple one.
18:32
the simpler the better :)
That's UWP but should take minimal work to make it work in WPF
might even work out-of-the-box
@ReedCopsey thanks
does that require me to understand MVVM ?
@LynnCrumbling plus galasoft
"understand mvvm" is an odd thing to say. It shows how I applied mvvm to my example, but if you understand objects, that really all there is to know.
Yes Kev, I'm a fan of MvvmLight
18:34
you don't even have to make it run if you just analyze the code. you kinda put it together all in your head.
theres a datacontext, you set a viewmodel to it, that allows you to bind in the view (.xaml), things are "observable"... you can access objects and their public props in the view based on what the datacontext is.
Bindings more or less lie at the heart of an MVVM program
MVVM doesn't really work without them
So Cory, yes, I use Galasoft. It implements ICommand for me as well as INotifyPropertyChanged
so its more the other way around, you can't understand MVVM without understanding bindings
@CoryEtmund don't worry about mvvm, just learn how to use bindings and then use them
youtube to the rescue
18:41
did we spam the binding sample? gitlab.com/so-wpf/samples/BindingSample
clone it, break it
It is small but shows a large part of what you need to know about bindings
You did :) i have it up already
thank you
If you know the stuff in there you are in good shape
Also, ask questions.
♬ spam spam spam spam spam spam spam spam spam ♬
first question. does "Code behind" refer to the code in your mainwindow.xaml.cs?
18:45
Yes, good question!
(very good, too!)
i remember a time when maverik went on a little rant about that
he is like that
is that just really bad practice?
In Mvvm, you try to minimize the amount of code in there
It almost always violates mvvm principles
(* on very rare occasion, that's not true)
18:46
so better practice is doing your work in a class
i'm guessing
There are downsides with code behind, harder to test not declarative like xaml, also usually the last place one checks when something is not working.
But - take event handlers for instance -- they normally live in there, and they violate mvvm.
Also if you would do what binding does in code behing it would be a huge mess juggling events
code behind is a fine place to put view-specific stuff
View stuff is perfect for codebehind, stuff like setting focus on load
Having code for that in the viewmodel would be nasty
18:47
maybe changing the color of a UI element based on some condition
that kind of stuff = code behind
Code behind is rarely needed ime
Maybe one in twenty views needs a small hack.
the more advanced with WPF you get the more you abstract all that stuff out
mainwindow.xaml <-- mainwindow design
mainwindow.xaml.cs <-- code behind (good for visual stuff)
class.cs <-- where everything else should be

?
> good for visual stuff
if we are doing proper mvvm wpf, class.cs = MainWindowViewModel.cs
18:49
not sure I worded it well, acceptable when it can't be done in xaml is better wording
Don't get in the habit of writing stuff in code behind, ask questions here when you feel the need.
For simple stuff you should never need it.
So in the binding sample, in the ViewModel.cs, every time there is some sort of interaction with the form it goes through the "methods" i think is what to call them for the firstName and lastName, to check and see if anything has changed, and if so then update the FullName?
those are Properties
            this.OnPropertyChanged();
                this.OnPropertyChanged(nameof(this.FullName));
the first line tells the UI that FirstName has changed
the second line tells the UI that FullName has also changed
mainwindow.xaml <-- stuff you've been doing
mainwindow.xaml.cs <-- call InitializeComponent(); instantite view model class, set data context
MainViewModel.cs <-- your commands and your stuff that is your data lives here. You bind to these properties.
So your mainwindow constructor might look like this:
        MainViewModel vm = null;
	public MainWindow(MainViewModel viewModel = null)
        {
            InitializeComponent();
            vm = viewModel ?? new MainViewModel();
            this.DataContext = vm;
        }
And that's ALL of the code in the .xaml.cs file
makes sense
You've now got a "backend" that for form can bind to, an you've set the datacontext to that backend.
Now bindings are live.
19:06
I don't see anything like that in the binding sample in mainwindow.xaml.cs
it's done in the xaml in this example
   <Window.DataContext>
        <local:ViewModel />
    </Window.DataContext>
ah okay
there are lots of ways to do this specific step, i personally like making my main view model a singleton and assigning it in window ctor
protected virtual void OnPropertyChanged([CallerMemberName] string propertyName = null)
    {
        this.PropertyChanged?.Invoke(this, new PropertyChangedEventArgs(propertyName));
    }
what the heck is that
in the ViewModel.cs
:)
19:11
a way to implement INPC
INPC is the mechanism that you use in a view model to inform the view that data has changed and the view needs to update
gotcha
it is dumb and stupid. the example there shows how to implement it in as nice a fashion as possible
So cory in your particular case.. heres how Mav's rant can save you!
do tell!
If you followed the "no code-behind" mentality: you could call bindings and set data context .. all of it from xaml and powershell could work without needing to deal with setting up that stuff from powershell side
(you only need to have the assembly loaded in memory)
I'm not saying you should do it -- in fact the only reason i know this stuff is because i was asked to do what you're trying to do.. but that's how I would have done it i had gone down that route
19:14
is there some advantage to making a wpf app with powershell?
all the code would still have been in a c# assembly
just seems like you are handicapping yourself right off the bat
no Julien - the powershell guys are like any other tech guys.. they just want everything done in what they use
there's no concept of proper tool for proper use
powershell doesn't understand xaml & xaml.cs pair - so you have to work around it.. by coding c# equivalent in powershell - i dont know why anybody wouldn't want to do that already in xaml/c#
the only exception is when they want "pretty input form" for otherwise pure powershell solution.. in which case you could create xaml form like cory did and create minimal bindings in powershell and then pull input out to powershell world
i'd love to figure it out in powershell since that what i've worked with a lot. but having variety can be good as well, especially if someone wants a "pretty input form" :)
btw Cory: DB access -- you should learn EFCore.. nobody would have taught you that in uni and I doubt you'll find an easier way of doing db queries from powershell
in that case cory, I'd expect you to google and find the same piece of code that i learned from ;)
because thats how my coding life is.. a lot of googling and banging head against the wall cos it's a lonely road when you start doing things in untraditional ways (PS: i never made the powershell pretty form they wanted me to)
19:20
I always thought powershell was great for getting stuff from sql
easier than C#, at least the way I first learned it
if you want to swing a giant hammer at every nail you see without care for detail / elegance / finesse and such philosophical stuff then yea powershell is great!
but the biggest powershell strength is also the biggest weakness in my book
what's that?
its like the JS world - you can tell it to do anything and it'll take a guess at your intent and then give you something
great for IT staff.. shitty for developers
19:24
i'm much more of administration than development so that makes about perfect sense
since you're big on powershell - have you tried to pull Exchange data types out of remote console WITHOUT Deserialized* namespace?
but in my free time, creating stuff can be fun
no I have not
that's a perfect example of why i hate working with powershell
all the data thats serialized on exchange side gets sent as one data type.. i have the corresponding assembly and know exactly which class needs to work with it
I don't have access to our exchange server or other important things yet since i've only been here for 6 months or so
except powershell has been told through its type definitions that deserialized types come from the Deserialized namespace and you end up with brand new classes that will not mix with c# unless you do another step to box and unbox them into correct type
you dont need any special access
just do a simple Get-Mailbox on your own account
explore its type and you'll see what i mean.. an IT guy doesn't care about data type.. a developer in typed world does and it's a nightmare to deal with
19:27
like i said, access is denied :) I believe only our two domain admins can get into that
i find that rather retarded that you can't access your own mailbox O.O
but ok.. irrelevant.. when you get access you'll see
I think it's time for a short walk, then come back to bang my head against my desk learning data bindings and mvvm
^ given you're powershell heavy - you should know about that stuff
my second quarrel with powershell is parallelization.. it sux at parallel tasks compared to how easily we do it in c#
hello all
Hi Anil
BTW Guys! I'll be away from 30th Sep - 9th Oct on holidays.. so yea.. make mental note :)
19:33
I'm about to start a new job soon. Which will include some WPF projects!
oh nice
hope its smooth sailing for you
@Maverik noooo
"smooth sailing" :) I think you meant something good
Sorry, expressions, idioms.. too hard to know them all
hassle free - no legacy projects to deal with.. no wpf projects that are really winform project under the guise of wpf
@CoryEtmundgood questions all of them, remember that you can ask the same questions a couple of times in case you forget
Setting breakpoints in the property setters and getters and run it in debug can perhaps be good
And then step through what happens
19:53
I have a customer list view (user control) and it's datagrid has a Detail button. The button shall open another view (user control) in the same window and after some operations in the detail view it would save and return to the list view. Is this a practical way to implement in MVVM?
I am not sure about how to implement such a navigation.
open another view in the same window... sounds like contentcontrol and datacontext switching.
the command on the detail method should give you access to the VM storing the customers information
you would pass that view model on to the new view you want to pop up on the button click
how do I navigate back?
that depends entirely on how you want navigation to happen in your app
is "navigating" opening a new window
is it making some panel appear?
is it completely changing the content of the current window?
nope, actually everything is on the same window
19:57
well if youve already figured out hwo to navigate forwards, going backwards is just the opposiute
main window has a border named stage and I have a menu
switching usercontrols
a terrible implementation which I plan to change later
but for now, that stage will be like switching cards for views
I think I am wrong from the first pace
OK I am looking deeper into contentcontrol and datacontext switching
is @Kcvin, Kevin?
Yeah that would be the correct way to do it
the Kevin I know, I mean? :)
When does Behavior OnAttached method get called? it isn't clear for me that it's called after the behavior is attached to an AssociatedObject!
when is it attached?
@Maverik thanks, I hope so
20:07
Mav - have fun man :)
20:36
cheers lynn
Probably have to look through reference source for that one Mohamed
21:26
@AnılYalçın yes, I changed my name to Kcvin because I kept getting pinged in Python room, which has 3 Kevin's
21:52
<Window.DataContext>
    <local:ViewModel />
</Window.DataContext>
It's giving me the error "the name ViewModel does not exist in the namespace"
public class ViewModel : INotifyPropertyChanged
But i have that in my ViewModel.cs
or is that not what it's looking for?
trying to follow the BindingSample as closely as possible
Taking off unfortunately..be back in the morning!
rebuild twice
the designer is pretty buggy, can be a false negative
22:21
I would try running it as Johan suggested
also make sure the namespace ViewModel is in matches the one the local xmlns is pointing to
22:53
if you're VM is defined in a separate project, you'll also need the assembly in the xmlns portion, too (just throwing out other ideas)

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