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Walkthrough: Constructing a Data-driven Dynamic Layout

Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) provides controls that support data-driven dynamic layouts. Using these controls with the Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) Designer for Visual Studio makes it easy for you to create these types of layouts. You can use the following controls in your applications:

The ListView control provides the infrastructure to display a set of data items in different layouts. You typically use a GridView in conjunction with the ListView control to display data in columns. For more information, see ListView Overview and GridView Overview.

In this walkthrough, you perform the following tasks:

  • Prepare a data source.

  • Create a WPF application.

  • Configure the default Grid panel control.

  • Add and configure a ListView control.

  • Add and configure a GridView in XAML.

  • Add and configure a Button control.

  • Add data binding code.

  • Test the application.

The following illustration shows how your application will appear.

A data-driven dynamic layout

Note

The dialog boxes and menu commands you see might differ from those described in Help depending on your active settings or edition. To change your settings, choose Import and Export Settings on the Tools menu. For more information, see Visual Studio Settings.

Prerequisites

You need the following components to complete this walkthrough:

  • Visual Studio 2008

Preparing the Data Source

For this walkthrough, you will need a sample data source to bind to. You will create a simple CSV file data source.

To prepare the data source

  1. Create a new folder and name it Data.

  2. In the Data folder, create a new text file and name it employees.csv.

    Note

    You can use any text editor, for example Notepad, to create the file.

  3. Add the following to the text file:

    LastName,FirstName,Title
    Davis,Sara,Sales Representative
    Funk,Don,Vice President, Sales
    Levin,Danny,Sales Representative
    Penor,Lori,Sales Representative
    Buschmann,Monika,Sales Manager
    Suominen,Ari,Sales Representative
    King,Russell,Sales Representative
    Cameron,Maria,Inside Sales Coordinator
    Doyle,Patricia,Sales Representative
    
  4. Save and close the file.

    Tip

    You can open the file in Excel and confirm that the data separated by the commas appears in separate columns.

  5. In the Data folder, create a new text file and name it schema.ini. The schema file describes the format of the text files in your data folder.

  6. Add the following to the text file:

    [employees.csv]
    Format=CSVDelimited
    ColNameHeader=True
    

    Tip

    In this walkthrough your CSV file has column headings. To bind to a CSV file that does not have column headings, change ColNameHeader=True to ColNameHeader=False.

  7. Save and close the file.

Creating the Project

The next procedure is to create the Visual Studio project for the application.

To create the project

  1. Create a new WPF Application project in Visual Basic or Visual C# named DataDrivenLayout. For more information, see How to: Create a New WPF Application Project.

    Window1.xaml opens in the WPF Designer.

  2. On the File menu, click Save All.

Configuring the Default Grid Panel Control

By default, the new WPF application contains a Window with a Grid panel. In this procedure you add two rows to the grid. You set the height of one row to Auto, so that it is sized to fit the content. You set the height of the other row to *, so that it uses the remaining available height.

To configure the default grid panel control

  1. In Design view, select the Grid. For more information, see How to: Select and Move Elements on the Design Surface.

  2. In the Properties window, locate the RowDefinitions property, and click the ellipsis button in the property value column.

    The Collection Editor appears.

  3. Click Add two times to add two rows.

  4. Set the Height property of the first row to *.

  5. Set the Height property of the second row to Auto.

  6. Click OK to close the Collection Editor and return to the WPF Designer.

    Now there are two rows in the grid, but only one row appears. The row whose Height property is set to Auto is temporarily hidden because it does not have any content. For this walkthrough, that is fine. To avoid this in the future, you can use star sizing while you work, and change to Auto when you are done.

  7. On the File menu, click Save All.

Adding and Configuring a ListView

In this procedure you add a ListView. You give the ListView a name so that you can refer to it from the code-behind file. You configure its layout properties.

To add and configure a ListView

  1. In Design view, select the Grid.

  2. From the Toolbox, in the Controls group, drag a ListView control onto the Grid.

  3. In the Properties window, set the following properties for the ListView:

    Property

    Value

    Name

    lvEmployees

    Grid.Column

    0

    Grid.ColumnSpan

    1

    Grid.Row

    0

    Grid.RowSpan

    1

    Width

    Auto

    Height

    Auto

    HorizontalAlignment

    Stretch

    VerticalAlignment

    Stretch

    Margin

    0

  4. On the File menu, click Save All.

Adding and Configuring a GridView

In this procedure you add a GridView with three columns to display the data from the text file. You give the columns names because you are going to refer to them from the code-behind to bind the data to the columns individually. For more information, see How to: Display ListView Contents by Using a GridView.

To add and configure a GridView

  1. In the XAML editor locate the ListView element. It looks like the following:

    <ListView <ATTRIBUTES> />
    

    Tip

    To easily highlight elements in XAML view, click the control in Design view or use the Document Outline window.

  2. Replace the ListView element with the following:

    <ListView x:Name="lvEmployees">
        <ListView.View>
            <GridView AllowsColumnReorder="True">
                <GridViewColumn x:Name="c1Employees" Header="Last Name"></GridViewColumn>
                <GridViewColumn x:Name="c2Employees" Header="First Name"></GridViewColumn>
                <GridViewColumn x:Name="c3Employees" Header="Title"></GridViewColumn>
            </GridView>
        </ListView.View>
    </ListView>
    
  3. On the File menu, click Save All.

Adding and Configuring a Button

In this procedure you add a Button and specify its Click event.

To add and configure a Button

  1. In Design view, select the Grid.

    Tip

    Because the ListView is covering the Grid, it might be difficult to select the Grid. You can use the TAB key or the Document Outline window to select the Grid.

  2. From the Toolbox, in the Controls group, drag a Button control onto the Grid.

  3. In the Properties window, set the following properties for the Button:

    Property

    Value

    Name

    btnGetData

    Content

    Get Data

    Grid.Column

    0

    Grid.ColumnSpan

    1

    Grid.Row

    1

    Grid.RowSpan

    1

    Width

    75

    Height

    23

    HorizontalAlignment

    Right

    VerticalAlignment

    Bottom

    Margin

    5

  4. In the XAML editor locate the Button element. It looks like the following:

    <Button <ATTRIBUTES>>Button</Button>
    

    Tip

    To easily highlight elements in XAML view, click the control in Design view or use the Document Outline window.

  5. Edit the XAML to add a Click event attribute. It should look like the following:

    <Button Click="btnGetData_Click" <ATTRIBUTES>>Button</Button>
    
  6. On the File menu, click Save All.

Adding the Data Binding Code

In this procedure you add the code for the Click event of the Button. At run time you click the button to get the data and bind it to the ListView and the GridView.

To add the data binding code

  1. Open the code-behind file; either Window1.xaml.cs or Window1.xaml.vb, depending on which language you selected for your project.

  2. At the top of the code editor, add the following code. In order to bind to the data you need to access the System.Data and System.Data.OleDb namespaces.

    Imports System.Data              'DataTable
    Imports System.Data.OleDb        'OleDbDataAdapter
    Imports System.Windows           'RoutedEventArgs
    Imports System.Windows.Data      'Binding
    Imports System.Windows.Controls  'ListView
    
    using System;                   //Exception 
    using System.Data;              //DataTable 
    using System.Data.OleDb;        //OleDbDataAdapter 
    using System.Windows;           //RoutedEventArgs 
    using System.Windows.Data;      //Binding 
    using System.Windows.Controls;  //ListView
    
  3. In the Window1 class, add the following code. You use a DataTable to store the data.

    Dim dtEmployees As DataTable
    
    DataTable dtEmployees;
    
  4. In the Window1 class, add the following code. When the user clicks the button, you get the data, and then bind it to the ListView.

    Private Sub btnGetData_Click(ByVal sender As Object, ByVal e As RoutedEventArgs)
    
        dtEmployees = GetData()
        BindData()
    End Sub
    
    private void btnGetData_Click(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
    {
        dtEmployees = GetData();
        BindData();
    }
    
  5. In the Window1 class, add the following code and specify the path to your Data folder. To get the data, you use an OleDbDataAdapter.

    Function GetData() As DataTable
    
        Dim sConnection As String = "Provider=Microsoft.Jet.OLEDB.4.0;Data Source=<Your Path>\Data\;Extended Properties=""text;HDR=yes;FMT=delimited"";" 
        Dim sSQL As String = "select * from employees.csv" 
    
        Dim dt As DataTable = New DataTable()
        Dim da As OleDbDataAdapter = New OleDbDataAdapter(sSQL, sConnection)
    
        Try
            da.Fill(dt)
    
        Catch ex As Exception
            MessageBox.Show(ex.ToString())
    
        End Try 
    
        Return dt
    End Function
    
    DataTable GetData()
    {
        string sConnection = "Provider=Microsoft.Jet.OLEDB.4.0;Data Source=<Your Path>\\Data\\;Extended Properties=\"text;HDR=yes;FMT=delimited\";";
        string sSQL = "select * from employees.csv";
    
        DataTable dt = new DataTable();
        OleDbDataAdapter da = new OleDbDataAdapter(sSQL, sConnection);
    
        try
        {
            da.Fill(dt);
        }
        catch (Exception e)
        {
            MessageBox.Show(e.ToString());
        }
        return dt;
    }
    
  6. In the Window1 class, add the following code. To bind the data to the ListView, you set its DataContext to the DataTable. You display the data columns in the columns of the GridView.

    Sub BindData()
        lvEmployees.DataContext = dtEmployees
        lvEmployees.SetBinding(ListView.ItemsSourceProperty, New Binding())
    
        c1Employees.DisplayMemberBinding = New Binding("LastName")
        c2Employees.DisplayMemberBinding = New Binding("FirstName")
        c3Employees.DisplayMemberBinding = New Binding("Title")
    End Sub
    
    void BindData()
    {
        lvEmployees.DataContext = dtEmployees;
        lvEmployees.SetBinding(ListView.ItemsSourceProperty, new Binding());
    
        c1Employees.DisplayMemberBinding = new Binding("LastName");
        c2Employees.DisplayMemberBinding = new Binding("FirstName");
        c3Employees.DisplayMemberBinding = new Binding("Title");
    }
    
  7. On the File menu, click Save All.

Setting the Window to Size Dynamically

The SizeToContent property specifies how the size of a Window changes when the size of its content changes. By default, this property is set to Manual, which means that the user can manually resize the window to fit the content. In this procedure you set this property to WidthAndHeight, which means that the window resizes dynamically when its content changes.

To set the Window to size dynamically

  1. Open Window1.xaml in the designer.

  2. In Design view, select the Window.

  3. In the Properties window, set the following properties for the Window:

    Property

    Value

    SizeToContent

    WidthAndHeight

    Width

    Auto

    Height

    Auto

  4. On the File menu, click Save All.

Testing the Application

To test the application

  1. On the Debug menu, click Start Debugging.

    The application starts and the window appears. Because you set the SizeToContent property to WidthAndHeight, the window is only large enough for the GridView headers and the Button.

  2. Click Get Data.

    The application gets the data and binds it to the GridView. The GridView, ListView, and Window all resize dynamically to fit the new content.

  3. Close the window.

Putting it all Together

The following is the completed Window1.xaml file:

<Window x:Class="Window1"
    xmlns="https://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"
    xmlns:x="https://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml"
    Title="Window1" Height="Auto" Width="Auto" SizeToContent="WidthAndHeight">
    <Grid>
        <Grid.RowDefinitions>
            <RowDefinition Height="*" />
            <RowDefinition Height="Auto" />
        </Grid.RowDefinitions>
        <ListView x:Name="lvEmployees">
            <ListView.View>
                <GridView AllowsColumnReorder="True">
                    <GridViewColumn x:Name="c1Employees" Header="Last Name"></GridViewColumn>
                    <GridViewColumn x:Name="c2Employees" Header="First Name"></GridViewColumn>
                    <GridViewColumn x:Name="c3Employees" Header="Title"></GridViewColumn>
                </GridView>
            </ListView.View>
        </ListView>
        <Button Click="btnGetData_Click" Name="btnGetData" Margin="5" Height="23" Width="75" HorizontalAlignment="Right" VerticalAlignment="Bottom" Grid.Column="0" Grid.ColumnSpan="1" Grid.Row="1" Grid.RowSpan="1">Get Data</Button>
    </Grid>
</Window>

Next Steps

In this walkthrough you used a GridView with three columns to display data. You bound data directly to each column individually. You can also use data templates to arrange and style the data in a ListView or a GridView. For more information, see Data Templating Overview.

You can experiment with using data templates in this walkthrough. For example, you can create a template such as the following:

<Window.Resources>
    <DataTemplate x:Key="templateEmployees">
        <Border BorderBrush="Silver" BorderThickness="1" Padding="5" Margin="5">
            <DockPanel>
                <StackPanel DockPanel.Dock="Left">
                    <TextBlock Text="{Binding Path=LastName}" />
                    <TextBlock Text="{Binding Path=FirstName}" />
                </StackPanel>
                <TextBlock Text="{Binding Path=Title}" DockPanel.Dock="Right" />
            </DockPanel>
        </Border>
    </DataTemplate>
</Window.Resources>

Then use the data template in the GridView with code such as the following:

<ListView.View>
    <GridView>
        <GridViewColumn CellTemplate="{StaticResource templateEmployees}" />
    </GridView>
</ListView.View>

Remove or comment the following code from the code-behind:

c1Employees.DisplayMemberBinding = New Binding("LastName")
c2Employees.DisplayMemberBinding = New Binding("FirstName")
c3Employees.DisplayMemberBinding = New Binding("Title")
c1Employees.DisplayMemberBinding = new Binding("LastName");
c2Employees.DisplayMemberBinding = new Binding("FirstName");
c3Employees.DisplayMemberBinding = new Binding("Title");

See Also

Tasks

How to: Construct a Data-driven Dynamic Layout

Concepts

The Layout System

WPF Designer Overview

Other Resources

Layout Walkthroughs

Working with the WPF Designer