问题
I have learned that if the height of a grid row, where the ScrollViewer
resides, is set as Auto
, the vertical scroll bar will not take effect since the actual size of the ScrollViewer
can be larger than the height in sight. So in order to make the scroll bar work, I should set the height to either a fixed number or star height
However, I now have this requirement, that I have two different views reside in two grid rows, and I have a toggle button to switch between these two views: when one view is shown, the other one is hidden/disappeared. So I have defined two rows, both heights are set as Auto
. And I bind the visibility of the view in each row to a boolean property from my ViewModel (one is converted from True
to Visible
and the other from True
to Collapsed
. The idea is when one view's visibility is Collapsed
, the height of the grid row/view will be changed to 0 automatically.
The view show/hidden is working fine. However, in one view I have a ScrollViewer
, which as I mentioned doesn't work when the row height is set as Auto
. Can anybody tell me how I can fulfill such requirement while still having the ScrollViewer
working automatically`? I guess I can set the height in code-behind. But since I am using MVVM, it would require extra communication/notification. Is there a more straightforward way to do that?
回答1:
Change Height from Auto
to *
, if you can.
Example:
<Window x:Class="WpfApplication3.MainWindow"
xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"
xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml"
Title="MainWindow" Height="200" Width="525">
<StackPanel Orientation="Horizontal" Background="LightGray">
<Grid Width="100">
<Grid.RowDefinitions>
<RowDefinition Height="Auto" />
<RowDefinition Height="Auto" />
</Grid.RowDefinitions>
<ScrollViewer VerticalScrollBarVisibility="Auto" x:Name="_scroll1">
<Border Height="300" Background="Red" />
</ScrollViewer>
<TextBlock Text="{Binding ElementName=_scroll1, Path=ActualHeight}" Grid.Row="1"/>
</Grid>
<Grid Width="100">
<Grid.RowDefinitions>
<RowDefinition Height="*" />
<RowDefinition Height="Auto" />
</Grid.RowDefinitions>
<ScrollViewer VerticalScrollBarVisibility="Auto" x:Name="_scroll2">
<Border Height="300" Background="Green" />
</ScrollViewer>
<TextBlock Text="{Binding ElementName=_scroll2, Path=ActualHeight}" Grid.Row="1"/>
</Grid>
</StackPanel>
</Window>
回答2:
In MVVM, the way that worked for me was to bind the height of the ScrollViewer
to the ActualHeight
of the parent control (which is always of type UIElement
).
ActualHeight
is a read-only property which is only set after the control has been drawn onto the screen. It may change if the window is resized.
<StackPanel>
<ScrollViewer Height="{Binding Path=ActualHeight,
RelativeSource={RelativeSource Mode=FindAncestor, AncestorType=UIElement}}">
<TextBlock Text=Hello"/>
</ScrollViewer>
</StackPanel>
But what if the parent control has an infinite height?
If the parent control has an infinite height, then we have a bigger problem. We have to keep setting the height of all parents, until we hit a control with a non-infinite height.
Snoop is absolutely invaluable for this:
If the "Height" for any XAML element is 0
or NaN
, you can set it to something using one of:
Height="{Binding Path=ActualHeight, RelativeSource={RelativeSource Mode=FindAncestor, AncestorType=UIElement}}"
VerticalAlignment="Stretch"
Height="Auto"
Hint: Use VerticalAlignment="Stretch"
if you are a child of a Grid
with a <RowDefinition Height="*">
, and the Binding RelativeSource...
elsewhere if that doesn't work.
If you're interested, here is all of my previous attempts to fix this issue:
Appendix A: Previous Attempt 1
Can also use this:
Height="{Binding Path=ActualHeight, RelativeSource={RelativeSource Mode=FindAncestor, AncestorType=StackPanel}}"
Appendix B: Previous Attempt 2
Useful info: see WPF - Auto Height in combination with MaxHeight.
If nothing seems to work, it's probably because the ActualHeight
of the parent is either 0 (so nothing is visible) or huge (so the scrollviewer never needs to appear). This is more of a problem if there are deeply nested grids, with a scrollviewer right at the bottom.
- Use Snoop to find the
ActualHeight
of the parentStackPanel
. In properties, filter by the word"Actual"
, which brings backActualHeight
andActualWidth
. - If
ActualHeight
is zero, give it a minimum height usingMinHeight
, so we can at least see something. - If
ActualHeight
is so huge that it goes off the edge of the screen (i.e. 16,000), give it a reasonable maximum height usingMaxHeight
, so the scrollbars will appear.
Once the scrollbars are appearing, then we can clean it up further:
- Bind the
Height
of theStackPanel
orGrid
to theActualHeight
of the parent.
Finally, put a ScrollViewer
inside this StackPanel
.
Appendix C: Previous Attempt 3
It turns out that this can sometimes fail:
Height="{Binding Path=ActualHeight, RelativeSource={RelativeSource Mode=FindAncestor, AncestorType=StackPanel}}"
The reason? It the binding fails, the height will be zero and nothing will be seen. The binding can fail if we are binding to an element which is not accessible. The binding will fail if we are going up
the visual tree, then down
to a leaf node (e.g. up to the parent grid, then down to the ActualHeight
of a row attached to that grid). This is why binding to the ActualWidth
of a RowDefinition
simply won't work.
Appendix D: Previous Attempt 4
I ended up getting this working by making sure that Height=Auto
for all of the parent elements from us to the first <Grid>
element in the UserControl.
回答3:
You can either set a fix height on your ScrollViewer but then you have to consider that the second row of your grid will have that height too since row's first child will be the ScrollViewer and row's height is auto, or you bind the height of ScrollViewer to another control in your layout. We don't know how your layout looks alike.
At the end if you don't like neither of both just set the row's height to * as swiszcz suggested or hack wpf write your own custom panel that will be able to layout everything possible in every parallel universe or something like that. :)
回答4:
What I discover is that you have to put your ScrollViewer
within a container that has Height=Auto
or you get his parent Heigh Actual Size
and apply it to that container.
In my case I have UserControl
like
<Grid Margin="0,0,0,0" Padding="0,2,0,0">
<ScrollViewer Height="Auto" ZoomMode="Disabled" IsVerticalScrollChainingEnabled="True" VerticalAlignment="Top"
HorizontalScrollMode="Enabled" HorizontalScrollBarVisibility="Disabled"
VerticalScrollMode="Enabled" VerticalScrollBarVisibility="Visible">
<ListView ItemsSource="{x:Bind PersonalDB.View, Mode=OneWay}" x:Name="DeviceList"
ScrollViewer.VerticalScrollBarVisibility="Hidden"
ItemTemplate="{StaticResource ContactListViewTemplate}"
SelectionMode="Single"
ShowsScrollingPlaceholders="False"
Grid.Row="1"
Grid.ColumnSpan="2"
VerticalAlignment="Stretch"
BorderThickness="0,0,0,0"
BorderBrush="DimGray">
<ListView.ItemsPanel>
<ItemsPanelTemplate>
<ItemsStackPanel AreStickyGroupHeadersEnabled="False" />
</ItemsPanelTemplate>
</ListView.ItemsPanel>
<ListView.GroupStyle>
<GroupStyle>
<GroupStyle.HeaderTemplate>
<DataTemplate x:DataType="local1:GroupInfoList">
<TextBlock Text="{x:Bind Key}"
Style="{ThemeResource TitleTextBlockStyle}"/>
</DataTemplate>
</GroupStyle.HeaderTemplate>
</GroupStyle>
</ListView.GroupStyle>
</ListView>
</ScrollViewer>
</Grid>
And I add it dinamically to ContentControl
which is within a Page
.
<Grid Background="{ThemeResource ApplicationPageBackgroundThemeBrush}" Margin="0,0,12,0">
<Grid.RowDefinitions>
<RowDefinition Height="70" />
<RowDefinition Height="*" MinHeight="200" />
</Grid.RowDefinitions>
<Grid Grid.Row="1" VerticalAlignment="Stretch" HorizontalAlignment="Stretch" >
<ContentControl x:Name="UIControlContainer" />
</Grid>
</Grid>
Notice that Heigh
of the Row
is *
When I populate ContentControl
I use this code in Loaded
event
UIControlContainer.Content = new UIDeviceSelection() {
VerticalAlignment = VerticalAlignment.Stretch,
HorizontalAlignment = HorizontalAlignment.Stretch,
Height = UIControlContainer.ActualHeight,
Width = UIControlContainer.ActualWidth
};
And also when ContentControl
changes its size you have to update size of the UserControl
.
UIControlContainer.SizeChanged += UIControlContainer_SizeChanged;
private void UIControlContainer_SizeChanged(object sender, SizeChangedEventArgs e)
{
if (UIControlContainer.Content != null)
{
if (UIControlContainer.Content is UserControl)
{
(UIControlContainer.Content as UserControl).Height = UIControlContainer.ActualHeight;
(UIControlContainer.Content as UserControl).Width = UIControlContainer.ActualWidth;
}
}
}
Enjoy!
P.S. Acctually I did it for UWP.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/19355818/how-to-make-scrollviewer-work-with-height-set-to-auto-in-wpf