Muokkaa

Jaa


FrameworkContentElement.Style Property

Definition

Gets or sets the style to be used by this element.

public:
 property System::Windows::Style ^ Style { System::Windows::Style ^ get(); void set(System::Windows::Style ^ value); };
public System.Windows.Style Style { get; set; }
member this.Style : System.Windows.Style with get, set
Public Property Style As Style

Property Value

The applied, nondefault style for the element, if present. Otherwise, null. The default for a default-constructed FrameworkContentElement is null.

Examples

The following example establishes a Resources collection on a FlowDocument root element and then references it as a resource as a specific style for a Paragraph.

<FlowDocument
  xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"
  xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml"
  x:Class=" SDKSample.Page2">
  <FlowDocument.Resources>
    <Style TargetType="{x:Type Paragraph}" x:Key="BluePara">
      <Setter Property="Background" Value="Blue"/>
      <Setter Property="FontSize" Value="18"/>
      <Setter Property="Foreground" Value="LightBlue"/>
      <Setter Property="FontFamily" Value="Trebuchet MS"/>
    </Style>
  </FlowDocument.Resources>
  <Paragraph Style="{StaticResource BluePara}">Lorem ipsum etc.</Paragraph>
</FlowDocument>

Remarks

The current style is often provided by a default style from theming, or from styles generally applied to objects of that type by resources at page or application level (an implicit style). This property does not set or return default (theme) styles, but it does return the implicit style or an explicit style. In the case of implicit or explicit styles, it does not matter whether the style is accessed as a resource or defined locally.

Setting the styles has some restrictions. You can reset the entire Style property to a new Style at any time, which will force a layout recomposition. However, as soon as that style is placed in use by a loaded element, the Style should be considered sealed. Attempting to make a change to any individual property of an in-use style (such as anything within the collection of Setters) causes an exception to be thrown. A style that is defined in markup is considered to be in use as soon as it is loaded from a resource dictionary (for resources), or the page it is contained within is loaded (for inline styles).

Style is a dependency property with special precedence. The locally set style generally operates at the highest precedence in the property system. If the Style is null at this point, during loading the property system checks for implicit styles as defined resources that specify that type. If the style is still null after this step, then the style comes from the default (theme) style, but the default style is not returned in the Style property value. See Dependency Property Value Precedence.

XAML Attribute Usage

<object Style="{resourceExtension StyleResourceKey}"/>

XAML Values

resourceExtension One of the following: , or . See XAML Resources.

styleResourceKey The key that identifies the style being requested. The key refers to an existing resource in a ResourceDictionary.

Note

Property element syntax is technically possible, but not recommended. See Inline Styles and Templates. A binding reference using TemplateBinding or Binding is also possible, but uncommon.

Dependency Property Information

Item Value
Identifier field StyleProperty
Metadata properties set to true AffectsMeasure

Applies to