FrameworkElement.BindingGroup Property
Definition
Important
Some information relates to prerelease product that may be substantially modified before it’s released. Microsoft makes no warranties, express or implied, with respect to the information provided here.
Gets or sets the BindingGroup that is used for the element.
public:
property System::Windows::Data::BindingGroup ^ BindingGroup { System::Windows::Data::BindingGroup ^ get(); void set(System::Windows::Data::BindingGroup ^ value); };
[System.Windows.Localizability(System.Windows.LocalizationCategory.NeverLocalize)]
public System.Windows.Data.BindingGroup BindingGroup { get; set; }
[<System.Windows.Localizability(System.Windows.LocalizationCategory.NeverLocalize)>]
member this.BindingGroup : System.Windows.Data.BindingGroup with get, set
Public Property BindingGroup As BindingGroup
Property Value
The BindingGroup that is used for the element.
- Attributes
Examples
The following examples are part of an application that checks whether the user has set the properties of two objects to equal values. The first example creates two TextBox controls, each of which is bound to a different data source. The StackPanel has a BindingGroup that contains a ValidationRule that checks that the two strings are equal.
<StackPanel>
<StackPanel.Resources>
<src:Type1 x:Key="object1" />
<src:Type2 x:Key="object2" />
</StackPanel.Resources>
<StackPanel Name="sp1"
Margin="5"
DataContext="{Binding Source={StaticResource object1}}"
Validation.ValidationAdornerSite="{Binding ElementName=label1}"
Orientation="Horizontal"
HorizontalAlignment="Center">
<StackPanel.BindingGroup>
<BindingGroup Name="bindingGroup">
<BindingGroup.ValidationRules>
<src:BindingGroupValidationRule ValidatesOnTargetUpdated="True" />
</BindingGroup.ValidationRules>
</BindingGroup>
</StackPanel.BindingGroup>
<TextBlock Text="First string" />
<TextBox Width="150"
Text="{Binding Path=PropertyA}" />
<TextBlock Text="Second string" />
<TextBox Width="150"
Text="{Binding Source={StaticResource object2},
Path=PropertyB, BindingGroupName=bindingGroup,
TargetNullValue=please enter a string}" />
</StackPanel>
<Label Name="label1"
Content="{Binding ElementName=sp1, Path=(Validation.Errors)[0].ErrorContent}"
Margin="5"
Foreground="Red"
HorizontalAlignment="Center" />
<Button HorizontalAlignment="Center"
Click="Button_Click"
IsDefault="True">
_Submit
</Button>
<StackPanel Orientation="Horizontal">
<TextBlock Text="First string:"
FontWeight="Bold" />
<TextBlock Text="{Binding Source={StaticResource object1},
Path=PropertyA, TargetNullValue=--}" />
</StackPanel>
<StackPanel Orientation="Horizontal">
<TextBlock Text="Second string:"
FontWeight="Bold" />
<TextBlock Text="{Binding Source={StaticResource object2},
Path=PropertyB, TargetNullValue=--}" />
</StackPanel>
</StackPanel>
The following example shows the ValidationRule that the previous example uses. In the Validate method override, the example gets each source object from the BindingGroup and checks whether the properties of the objects are equal.
public class Type1
{
public string PropertyA { get; set; }
public Type1()
{
PropertyA = "Default Value";
}
}
public class Type2
{
public string PropertyB { get; set; }
public Type2()
{
}
}
public class BindingGroupValidationRule : ValidationRule
{
public override ValidationResult Validate(object value, System.Globalization.CultureInfo cultureInfo)
{
BindingGroup bg = value as BindingGroup;
Type1 object1 = null;
Type2 object2 = null;
foreach (object item in bg.Items)
{
if (item is Type1)
{
object1 = item as Type1;
}
if (item is Type2)
{
object2 = item as Type2;
}
}
if (object1 == null || object2 == null)
{
return new ValidationResult(false, "BindingGroup did not find source object.");
}
string string1 = bg.GetValue(object1, "PropertyA") as string;
string string2 = bg.GetValue(object2, "PropertyB") as string;
if (string1 != string2)
{
return new ValidationResult(false, "The two strings must be identical.");
}
return ValidationResult.ValidResult;
}
}
Public Class Type1
Public Property PropertyA() As String
Public Sub New()
PropertyA = "Default Value"
End Sub
End Class
Public Class Type2
Public Property PropertyB() As String
Public Sub New()
End Sub
End Class
Public Class BindingGroupValidationRule
Inherits ValidationRule
Public Overrides Function Validate(ByVal value As Object, ByVal cultureInfo As System.Globalization.CultureInfo) As ValidationResult
Dim bg As BindingGroup = TryCast(value, BindingGroup)
Dim object1 As Type1 = Nothing
Dim object2 As Type2 = Nothing
For Each item As Object In bg.Items
If TypeOf item Is Type1 Then
object1 = TryCast(item, Type1)
End If
If TypeOf item Is Type2 Then
object2 = TryCast(item, Type2)
End If
Next item
If object1 Is Nothing OrElse object2 Is Nothing Then
Return New ValidationResult(False, "BindingGroup did not find source object.")
End If
Dim string1 As String = TryCast(bg.GetValue(object1, "PropertyA"), String)
Dim string2 As String = TryCast(bg.GetValue(object2, "PropertyB"), String)
If string1 <> string2 Then
Return New ValidationResult(False, "The two strings must be identical.")
End If
Return ValidationResult.ValidResult
End Function
End Class
To invoke the ValidationRule, call the UpdateSources method. The following example calls UpdateSources when the click event of the button occurs.
private void Button_Click(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
sp1.BindingGroup.UpdateSources();
}
Private Sub Button_Click(ByVal sender As Object, ByVal e As RoutedEventArgs)
sp1.BindingGroup.UpdateSources()
End Sub
Remarks
A BindingGroup can be used to validate the values of multiple properties of an object. For example, suppose that an application prompts the user to enter an address and then populates an object of type Address
, which has the properties Street
, City
, ZipCode
, and Country
, with the values that the user provided. The application has a panel that contains four TextBox controls, each of which is bound to one of the object's properties. You can use a ValidationRule in a BindingGroup to validate the Address
object. For example, the ValidationRule can ensure that the zip code is valid for the country/region of the address.
Child elements inherit the BindingGroup from their parent elements, just as with any other inheritable property.
Dependency Property Information
Identifier field | BindingGroupProperty |
Metadata properties set to true |
Inherits |
Applies to
.NET