问题
Or, to be more clear, how can I format a block of text (in my case, to be included within a tooltip) such that some portions of the text come from bound values.
In plain C# I would use:
_toolTip.Text = string.Format("{1:#0}% up, {2:#0}% down",
Environment.NewLine, percentageOne, percentage2);
However the WPF XAML markup for a Text property seems able to contain only a single binding. The curly braces gave me high hopes, but this isn't possible:
<Element>
<Element.Tooltip>
<!-- This won't compile -->
<TextBlock Text="{Binding Path=PercentageOne}% up, {Binding Path=PercentageTwo}% down"/>
</Element.Tooltip>
</Element>
I read that the Run.Text
property is not a dependency property and can therefore not be bound.
Is there a way I can perform this formatting in XAML?
回答1:
You can use MultiBinding + StringFormat (requires WPF 3.5 SP1):
<TextBox.Text>
<MultiBinding StringFormat="{}{1:#0}% up, {2:#0}% down">
<Binding Path="PercentageOne" />
<Binding Path="PercentageTwo"/>
</MultiBinding>
</TextBox.Text>
Regarding Run.Text - you can't bind to it but there are some workarounds:
- http://fortes.com/2007/03/20/bindablerun/
- http://paulstovell.net/blog/index.php/attached-bindablerun/
回答2:
I would split into multiple textblocks, binding each one with the StringFormat={0:P} in the binding as such:
<TextBox Text="{Binding Something, StringFormat=\{0:P\}}" />
See this post for examples:Lester's WPF Blog on StringFormat
Checkout VS2010 - The binding from properties includes formatting in the options.
回答3:
If you're using 3.5 SP1, Aku's answer is the way to go. If you're not, you can use the FormatConverter from my WPF Converters library.
回答4:
The way I've solved this in the past is actually to break the TextBlock you have in your listing up into several TextBlocks. Try something like this:
<Element>
<Element.Tooltip>
<StackPanel Orientation="Horizontal">
<TextBlock Text="{Binding Path=PercentageOne}"/>
<TextBlock Text="% up, "/>
<TextBlock Text="{Binding Path=PercentageTwo}"/>
<TextBlock Text="% down"/>
</StackPanel>
</Element.Tooltip>
</Element>
Alternately you can create something like a StringFormatConverter, which could take the format string as a parameter, and use a MultiBinding to pass it the parameters. See this link for MultiBindings:
MultiBinding Info
And this one for info on converters:
Converters Info
You can pretty easily imagine a converter that takes "object[] values" instead of "object value" as it's first parameter, and passes those on to the Format function.
回答5:
As far as I know, WPF doesn't do what you want. You do have a much more powerful (albeit more involved) solution.
Take a look at the IValueConverter interface.
MSDN HowTo link here
EDIT
Based on aku's answer, and your assertion that you can't use 3.5 SP1, here's an alternative.
Take a look at Phil Haack's recent series of posts on string formatting:
- Fun With Named Formats, String Parsing, and Edge Cases
- Named Formats Redux
Create a ValueConverter as that takes the format as a property. You should then be able to bind your data object and have it format based on your defined format (using property name instead of position).
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/447035/what-is-the-wpf-xaml-data-binding-equivalent-of-string-format