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Variable height expand/collapse rows in a ListView with HasUnevenRows in Xamarin Forms

Hi!

Recently I was asked to make a ListView in Xamarin Forms (on iOS at the moment) where you could expand and collapse rows by clicking on them. This is quite a common paradigm but is actually quite hard to do in Xamarin Forms. The problem is, the ListView doesn't re-layout the items when you expand and collapse them, so they overlap and it looks horrible. Here's my ListView:

 <ListView x:Name="listView" ItemsSource="{Binding List, Mode=OneWay}" HasUnevenRows="True" SeparatorVisibility="None" Grid.Row="3">
  <ListView.ItemTemplate>
    <DataTemplate>
       <ViewCell>
         <StackLayout Orientation="Vertical">
             <Grid ColumnSpacing="0" RowSpacing="0" BackgroundColor="White" Margin="10,0" Padding="10">
               <Grid.RowDefinitions>
                 <RowDefinition Height="Auto"/>
                   <RowDefinition Height="Auto"/>
                   <RowDefinition Height="Auto"/>
                 </Grid.RowDefinitions>
                 <Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
                   <ColumnDefinition Width="*"/>
                   <ColumnDefinition Width="*"/>
                   <ColumnDefinition Width="*"/>
                   <ColumnDefinition Width="30"/>
                 </Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
                 <Grid.GestureRecognizers>
                   <TapGestureRecognizer Command="{Binding BindingContext.ExpandCommand, Source={x:Reference thisPage}}" CommandParameter="{Binding .}"/>
                 </Grid.GestureRecognizers>
                 <Label Grid.Row="0" Grid.Column="0" Text="{Binding Name}"/>
                 <Label Grid.Row="0" Grid.Column="1" Text="{Binding Created}"/>
                 <StackLayout Grid.Row="0" Grid.Column="3" HorizontalOptions="End" VerticalOptions="Start" Margin="0,0,10,0" WidthRequest="20" HeightRequest="20">
                   <Image Source="{Binding IsExpanded, Converter={StaticResource BoolToStringConverter}, ConverterParameter='chevronup.png:chevrondown.png'}" WidthRequest="20" HeightRequest="20"/>
                 </StackLayout>
                 <Label Grid.Row="1" Grid.Column="1" Text="Style" HorizontalOptions="Start" />
                 <Label Grid.Row="1" Grid.Column="2" Text="{Binding Style}" HorizontalOptions="Start"/>
                 <Grid Grid.Row="2" ColumnSpacing="0" RowSpacing="0" BackgroundColor="White" Margin="0,10,0,0" Grid.ColumnSpan="4" HorizontalOptions="Start" IsVisible="{Binding IsExpanded}">
                   <Grid.RowDefinitions>
                     <RowDefinition Height="Auto"/>
                     <RowDefinition Height="Auto"/>
                   </Grid.RowDefinitions>
                   <Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
                     <ColumnDefinition Width="*"/>
                     <ColumnDefinition Width="*"/>
                     <ColumnDefinition Width="*"/>
                     <ColumnDefinition Width="30"/>
                   </Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
                   <StackLayout Orientation="Horizontal" Grid.Row="2" Grid.Column="1">
                     <Label Text="Weight" />
                     <Label Text="{Binding Weight}" />
                   </StackLayout>
                   <Label Grid.Row="2" Grid.Column="2" Text="{Binding ActualWeight}" />
                 </Grid>
               </Grid>
             </StackLayout>
           </ViewCell>
         </DataTemplate>
       </ListView.ItemTemplate>
     </ListView>

Now setting the IsExpanded flag on the item will expand the second Grid, but it overlaps the items below it. I read somewhere that the ListView only does layout when the ItemsSource changes, so I first tried setting the ItemsSource to null, waiting for 50 msecs, then setting it back to its original value. This worked okay although the UI flashed a bit, and I thought I was home and dry. Then I tried a list that had a lot of items and realised that the scroll view position was getting reset to the top. I then monkeyed around with scrolling the ListView back to where it should be but it was all pretty ugly.

Then I found someone who was trying to do the opposite to me - he was trying to set the scroll position to the top when he loaded new items in the list, and I realised that the scroll view must not move when you reset the ItemsSource. So here's my final solution:

 ExpandCommand = new DelegateCommand<ListItem>(DoExpand);

       private void DoExpand(ListItem obj)
        {
            var data = new List<ListItem>(this.List);
            var expanded = obj.IsExpanded;
            foreach (var item in data)
                item.IsExpanded = false;
            obj.IsExpanded = !expanded;
            this.List = data;
        }

We change the ItemsSource to a collection that contains exactly the same items, but with some expanded or collapsed. The ListView dutifully re-lays out the items and recalculates the heights, but the scroll view stays in the same place (another bug in my opinion).

Works a treat! The items expand and collapse in place with hardly any flickering.

Enjoy!

Paul Tallett, App Dev Architect, UX Global Practice, Microsoft, July 2017

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