XAML: make a ScrollViewer show scrollbars when the ScaleTransform of a child object gets big

skb picture skb · Mar 6, 2010 · Viewed 7.9k times · Source

I am making a sort of "print preview" control for some documents in my Silverlight 3 application. I have a Canvas (for showing the document) inside of a ScrollViewer, and I have zoom in / zoom out buttons that control the X and Y Scale properties of the ScaleTransform for the Canvas.RenderTransform property. I want the scrollbars of the ScrollViewer to show up when I "zoom in" enough such that the canvas is no longer visible in the ScrollViewer area, but it seems that they only show up depending on the Width/Height of the Canvas itself, regardless of whether it is zoomed in or not.

Can anyone help?

Answer

Todd Main picture Todd Main · Mar 9, 2010

Yeah, the problem is that there is no LayoutTransform in Silverlight. There are some workarounds to this problem listed here.

The idea here is to provide an intermediate canvas that gets resized and as a result, resizes the scrollable area. For example, if I have the following XAML:

<Grid x:Name="LayoutRoot">
    <Grid.RowDefinitions>
        <RowDefinition Height="200" />
        <RowDefinition Height="25" />
    </Grid.RowDefinitions>
        <ScrollViewer Grid.Row="0" x:Name="sc" VerticalScrollBarVisibility="Auto" 
                      HorizontalScrollBarVisibility="Auto" Width="200" Height="200" >
        <Canvas x:Name="sizer" Width="200" Height="200">
            <Rectangle x:Name="gradientRect" Width="200" Height="200">
            <Rectangle.RenderTransform>
                <ScaleTransform ScaleX="1" ScaleY="1"/>
            </Rectangle.RenderTransform>
                <Rectangle.Fill>
                    <LinearGradientBrush StartPoint="0,0" EndPoint="1,1">
                        <GradientStop Color="Red" Offset="0.1"/>
                        <GradientStop Color="Yellow" Offset="0.5"/>
                        <GradientStop Color="Red" Offset="0.9"/>
                    </LinearGradientBrush>
                </Rectangle.Fill>
            </Rectangle>
        </Canvas>
    </ScrollViewer>
    <Button Grid.Row="1" Content="Multiply by Two" Click="ScaleRect" Width="100" Height="25"></Button>
</Grid>

You'll notice that I put the <Canvas x:Name="sizer"/> between the <ScrollViewer/> and <Rectangle/> and the click event of ScaleRect in the <Button/>.

The ScaleRect sub simply scales the rectangle by 2. That value is then used to change the sizer Width and Height, thus updating the ScrollViewer's scrollbars. Here's the sub for ScaleRect:

Private Sub ScaleRect(ByVal sender As Object, ByVal e As RoutedEventArgs)
    Dim zoom As Double = 2.0
    Dim scaleX = gradientRect.RenderTransform.GetValue(ScaleTransform.ScaleXProperty)
    Dim scaleY = gradientRect.RenderTransform.GetValue(ScaleTransform.ScaleYProperty)
    gradientRect.RenderTransform.SetValue(ScaleTransform.ScaleXProperty, scaleX * zoom)
    gradientRect.RenderTransform.SetValue(ScaleTransform.ScaleYProperty, scaleY * zoom)
    sizer.Height *= zoom
    sizer.Width *= zoom
End Sub