I need to bind some data to a DataGrid with variable number of columns. I made it work using following code:
int n = 0;
foreach (string title in TitleList)
{
DataGridTextColumn col = new DataGridTextColumn();
col.Header = title;
Binding binding = new Binding(string.Format("DataList[{0}]", n++));
binding.Mode = BindingMode.TwoWay;
col.Binding = binding;
grid.Columns.Add(col);
}
where DataList is declared as:
public ObservableCollection<double> DataList { get; set; }
and TitleList is declared as:
public ObservableCollection<string> TitleList { get; set; }
The problem is that, even though I specified TwoWay binding, it is really one-way. When I click a cell to try to edit, I got an exception "'EditItem' is not allowed for this view". Did I just miss something in the binding expression?
P.S. I found an article from Deborah "Populating a DataGrid with Dynamic Columns in a Silverlight Application using MVVM". However, I had hard time to make it work for my case (specifically, I can't make the header binding work). Even if it worked, I'm still facing issues like inconsistent cell styles. That's why I'm wondering if I could make my above code work - with a little tweak?
EDIT: I found another post which might be related to my problem: Implicit Two Way binding. It looks if you bind to a list of string to a TextBox using
<TextBox Text="{Binding}"/>
You will get an error like "Two-way binding requires Path or XPath". But the problem can easily be fixed by using
<TextBox Text="{Binding Path=DataContext, RelativeSource={RelativeSource Self}}"/>
or
<TextBox Text="{Binding .}"/>
Can anybody give me a hint if my problem can be solved in a similar way?
Do you bind to an indexer?. can you show us how your DataList Property looks like?
i did the same a while ago with an indexed property.
public SomeObjectWithIndexer DataList
{get; set;}
public class SomeObjectWithIndexer
{
public string this
{
get { ... }
set { ... }//<-- you need this one for TwoWay
}
}
EDIT: the reason that you cant edit your Property, is that you try to edit a "double field". one workaround would be to wrap your double into a class with INotifyPropertyChanged.
public class DataListItem
{
public double MyValue { get; set;}//with OnPropertyChanged() and stuff
}
then you can use a
ObservableCollection<DataListItem>
and you can edit your value. the question wether the index are always the same stay still around :)
Binding binding = new Binding(string.Format("DataList[{0}].MyValue", n++));
EDIT2: working example: just to show twoway is working
public class DataItem
{
public string Name { get; set; }
public ObservableCollection<DataListItem> DataList { get; set; }
public DataItem()
{
this.DataList = new ObservableCollection<DataListItem>();
}
}
Wrapper for double:
public class DataListItem
{
private double myValue;
public double MyValue
{
get { return myValue; }
set { myValue = value; }//<-- set breakpoint here to see that edit is working
}
}
usercontrol with a datagrid
<UserControl x:Class="WpfStackoverflow.IndexCollectionDataGrid"
xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"
xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml"
xmlns:mc="http://schemas.openxmlformats.org/markup-compatibility/2006"
xmlns:d="http://schemas.microsoft.com/expression/blend/2008"
mc:Ignorable="d"
d:DesignHeight="300" d:DesignWidth="300">
<DataGrid ItemsSource="{Binding MyList}" AutoGenerateColumns="False">
<DataGrid.Columns>
<DataGridTextColumn Header="Name" Binding="{Binding Path=Name}" />
<DataGridTextColumn Header="Index1" Binding="{Binding Path=DataList[0].MyValue, Mode=TwoWay}" />
<DataGridTextColumn Header="Index2" Binding="{Binding Path=DataList[1].MyValue, Mode=TwoWay}" />
</DataGrid.Columns>
</DataGrid>
</UserControl>
.cs
public partial class IndexCollectionDataGrid : UserControl
{
public IndexCollectionDataGrid()
{
InitializeComponent();
this.MyList = new ObservableCollection<DataItem>();
var m1 = new DataItem() {Name = "test1"};
m1.DataList.Add(new DataListItem() { MyValue = 10 });
m1.DataList.Add(new DataListItem() { MyValue = 20 });
var m2 = new DataItem() { Name = "test2" };
m2.DataList.Add(new DataListItem() { MyValue = 100 });
m2.DataList.Add(new DataListItem() { MyValue = 200 });
this.MyList.Add(m1);
this.MyList.Add(m2);
this.DataContext = this;
}
public ObservableCollection<DataItem> MyList { get; set; }
}
i hope you get in the right direction with this example.