CanExecuteChanged event of ICommand

Pritesh picture Pritesh · Jun 21, 2011 · Viewed 28.2k times · Source

Icommand contains two methods and one event.

What the two methods do is clear, but I can’t understand what the event does that is provided in ICommand.

When is the CanExecuteChanged event raised?

The below explanation is on MSDN but I can’t understand it.

CanExecuteChanged is raised if the command manager that centralizes the commanding operations detects a change in the command source that might invalidate a command that has been raised but not yet executed by the command binding.

Can you please explain this in simple terms?

Thanks......

Answer

CodeNaked picture CodeNaked · Jun 21, 2011

This event is raised by the command to notify it's consumers (i.e. Button, MenuItem) that it's CanExecute property may have changed. So if focus is moved from one TextBox to another, your command may need to be enabled/disabled. This information also needs to be passed to any controls using your command.

In general, this event simply reexposes the CommandManager.RequerySuggested event. From the RoutedCommand class:

public event EventHandler CanExecuteChanged {
    add {
        CommandManager.RequerySuggested += value;
    }
    remove {
        CommandManager.RequerySuggested -= value;
    }
}

The RequerySuggested event is fired quite often, as focus is moved, text selection is changed. This can also be manually raised by calling InvalidateRequerySuggested.