BooleanToVisibilityConverter to collapse/show a TabItem



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0















In MainWindow.xaml I have the following...



<Window.Resources>
<BooleanToVisibilityConverter x:Key="BooleanToVisibility" />
</Window.Resources>

// Tab control

<TabItem x:Name="DebugTab" Header="Debug" Visibility="Binding Path=DebugTabState, Converter=StaticResource ResourceKey=BooleanToVisibility">
// Some content
</TabItem>


In MainWindow.xaml.cs I have the following...



public bool DebugTabState

get

return AppData.EnableDebuggingCheckBox;




In DebugSettings.xaml I have the following...



<CheckBox x:Name="EnableDebuggingCheckBox" Content="Enable Debugging" IsChecked="Binding Path=EnableDebugging" />


In DebugSettings.xaml.cs I have the following...



public bool EnableDebugging

get

return AppData.EnableDebuggingCheckBox;

set

AppData.EnableDebuggingCheckBox = value;




And finally, in AppData.cs I have the following...



private bool _enableDebuggingCheckBox;

public bool EnableDebuggingCheckBox

get

return _enableDebuggingCheckBox;

set

_enableDebuggingCheckBox = value;
OnPropertyChanged("EnableDebuggingCheckBox");




Checking and unchecking EnableDebuggingCheckBox updates the value to true or false, as expected, but the DebugTab isn't hiding or showing. Am I missing something?



Thanks!










share|improve this question

















  • 3





    There is no OnPropertyChanged notification from MainWindow.DebugTabState

    – Klaus Gütter
    Nov 15 '18 at 14:57











  • Somewhere you have local:DebugSettings and then an additional property in the view? Why not binding directly to that control (just give it an x:Name): Visibility="Binding DebugTabState, ElementName=debugSettings, ... ? I recommend you to look into MVVM earlier, it will help you to design better UI.

    – Sinatr
    Nov 15 '18 at 15:25











  • @Sinatr - The checkbox is in a usercontrol separate from MainWindow where I need to hide/show the tab. My thought was that updating a public variable that holds the last state of the checkbox and implements INotifyPropertyChanged would resolve the issue.

    – user642153
    Nov 15 '18 at 15:30











  • Sure, you can implement INotifyPropertyChanged in the class holding DebugTabState, then subscribe to PropertyChanged event of class with EnableDebuggingCheckBox to rise notification for DebugTabState, but this is silly.

    – Sinatr
    Nov 15 '18 at 15:35

















0















In MainWindow.xaml I have the following...



<Window.Resources>
<BooleanToVisibilityConverter x:Key="BooleanToVisibility" />
</Window.Resources>

// Tab control

<TabItem x:Name="DebugTab" Header="Debug" Visibility="Binding Path=DebugTabState, Converter=StaticResource ResourceKey=BooleanToVisibility">
// Some content
</TabItem>


In MainWindow.xaml.cs I have the following...



public bool DebugTabState

get

return AppData.EnableDebuggingCheckBox;




In DebugSettings.xaml I have the following...



<CheckBox x:Name="EnableDebuggingCheckBox" Content="Enable Debugging" IsChecked="Binding Path=EnableDebugging" />


In DebugSettings.xaml.cs I have the following...



public bool EnableDebugging

get

return AppData.EnableDebuggingCheckBox;

set

AppData.EnableDebuggingCheckBox = value;




And finally, in AppData.cs I have the following...



private bool _enableDebuggingCheckBox;

public bool EnableDebuggingCheckBox

get

return _enableDebuggingCheckBox;

set

_enableDebuggingCheckBox = value;
OnPropertyChanged("EnableDebuggingCheckBox");




Checking and unchecking EnableDebuggingCheckBox updates the value to true or false, as expected, but the DebugTab isn't hiding or showing. Am I missing something?



Thanks!










share|improve this question

















  • 3





    There is no OnPropertyChanged notification from MainWindow.DebugTabState

    – Klaus Gütter
    Nov 15 '18 at 14:57











  • Somewhere you have local:DebugSettings and then an additional property in the view? Why not binding directly to that control (just give it an x:Name): Visibility="Binding DebugTabState, ElementName=debugSettings, ... ? I recommend you to look into MVVM earlier, it will help you to design better UI.

    – Sinatr
    Nov 15 '18 at 15:25











  • @Sinatr - The checkbox is in a usercontrol separate from MainWindow where I need to hide/show the tab. My thought was that updating a public variable that holds the last state of the checkbox and implements INotifyPropertyChanged would resolve the issue.

    – user642153
    Nov 15 '18 at 15:30











  • Sure, you can implement INotifyPropertyChanged in the class holding DebugTabState, then subscribe to PropertyChanged event of class with EnableDebuggingCheckBox to rise notification for DebugTabState, but this is silly.

    – Sinatr
    Nov 15 '18 at 15:35













0












0








0








In MainWindow.xaml I have the following...



<Window.Resources>
<BooleanToVisibilityConverter x:Key="BooleanToVisibility" />
</Window.Resources>

// Tab control

<TabItem x:Name="DebugTab" Header="Debug" Visibility="Binding Path=DebugTabState, Converter=StaticResource ResourceKey=BooleanToVisibility">
// Some content
</TabItem>


In MainWindow.xaml.cs I have the following...



public bool DebugTabState

get

return AppData.EnableDebuggingCheckBox;




In DebugSettings.xaml I have the following...



<CheckBox x:Name="EnableDebuggingCheckBox" Content="Enable Debugging" IsChecked="Binding Path=EnableDebugging" />


In DebugSettings.xaml.cs I have the following...



public bool EnableDebugging

get

return AppData.EnableDebuggingCheckBox;

set

AppData.EnableDebuggingCheckBox = value;




And finally, in AppData.cs I have the following...



private bool _enableDebuggingCheckBox;

public bool EnableDebuggingCheckBox

get

return _enableDebuggingCheckBox;

set

_enableDebuggingCheckBox = value;
OnPropertyChanged("EnableDebuggingCheckBox");




Checking and unchecking EnableDebuggingCheckBox updates the value to true or false, as expected, but the DebugTab isn't hiding or showing. Am I missing something?



Thanks!










share|improve this question














In MainWindow.xaml I have the following...



<Window.Resources>
<BooleanToVisibilityConverter x:Key="BooleanToVisibility" />
</Window.Resources>

// Tab control

<TabItem x:Name="DebugTab" Header="Debug" Visibility="Binding Path=DebugTabState, Converter=StaticResource ResourceKey=BooleanToVisibility">
// Some content
</TabItem>


In MainWindow.xaml.cs I have the following...



public bool DebugTabState

get

return AppData.EnableDebuggingCheckBox;




In DebugSettings.xaml I have the following...



<CheckBox x:Name="EnableDebuggingCheckBox" Content="Enable Debugging" IsChecked="Binding Path=EnableDebugging" />


In DebugSettings.xaml.cs I have the following...



public bool EnableDebugging

get

return AppData.EnableDebuggingCheckBox;

set

AppData.EnableDebuggingCheckBox = value;




And finally, in AppData.cs I have the following...



private bool _enableDebuggingCheckBox;

public bool EnableDebuggingCheckBox

get

return _enableDebuggingCheckBox;

set

_enableDebuggingCheckBox = value;
OnPropertyChanged("EnableDebuggingCheckBox");




Checking and unchecking EnableDebuggingCheckBox updates the value to true or false, as expected, but the DebugTab isn't hiding or showing. Am I missing something?



Thanks!







c# wpf






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Nov 15 '18 at 14:55







user642153














  • 3





    There is no OnPropertyChanged notification from MainWindow.DebugTabState

    – Klaus Gütter
    Nov 15 '18 at 14:57











  • Somewhere you have local:DebugSettings and then an additional property in the view? Why not binding directly to that control (just give it an x:Name): Visibility="Binding DebugTabState, ElementName=debugSettings, ... ? I recommend you to look into MVVM earlier, it will help you to design better UI.

    – Sinatr
    Nov 15 '18 at 15:25











  • @Sinatr - The checkbox is in a usercontrol separate from MainWindow where I need to hide/show the tab. My thought was that updating a public variable that holds the last state of the checkbox and implements INotifyPropertyChanged would resolve the issue.

    – user642153
    Nov 15 '18 at 15:30











  • Sure, you can implement INotifyPropertyChanged in the class holding DebugTabState, then subscribe to PropertyChanged event of class with EnableDebuggingCheckBox to rise notification for DebugTabState, but this is silly.

    – Sinatr
    Nov 15 '18 at 15:35












  • 3





    There is no OnPropertyChanged notification from MainWindow.DebugTabState

    – Klaus Gütter
    Nov 15 '18 at 14:57











  • Somewhere you have local:DebugSettings and then an additional property in the view? Why not binding directly to that control (just give it an x:Name): Visibility="Binding DebugTabState, ElementName=debugSettings, ... ? I recommend you to look into MVVM earlier, it will help you to design better UI.

    – Sinatr
    Nov 15 '18 at 15:25











  • @Sinatr - The checkbox is in a usercontrol separate from MainWindow where I need to hide/show the tab. My thought was that updating a public variable that holds the last state of the checkbox and implements INotifyPropertyChanged would resolve the issue.

    – user642153
    Nov 15 '18 at 15:30











  • Sure, you can implement INotifyPropertyChanged in the class holding DebugTabState, then subscribe to PropertyChanged event of class with EnableDebuggingCheckBox to rise notification for DebugTabState, but this is silly.

    – Sinatr
    Nov 15 '18 at 15:35







3




3





There is no OnPropertyChanged notification from MainWindow.DebugTabState

– Klaus Gütter
Nov 15 '18 at 14:57





There is no OnPropertyChanged notification from MainWindow.DebugTabState

– Klaus Gütter
Nov 15 '18 at 14:57













Somewhere you have local:DebugSettings and then an additional property in the view? Why not binding directly to that control (just give it an x:Name): Visibility="Binding DebugTabState, ElementName=debugSettings, ... ? I recommend you to look into MVVM earlier, it will help you to design better UI.

– Sinatr
Nov 15 '18 at 15:25





Somewhere you have local:DebugSettings and then an additional property in the view? Why not binding directly to that control (just give it an x:Name): Visibility="Binding DebugTabState, ElementName=debugSettings, ... ? I recommend you to look into MVVM earlier, it will help you to design better UI.

– Sinatr
Nov 15 '18 at 15:25













@Sinatr - The checkbox is in a usercontrol separate from MainWindow where I need to hide/show the tab. My thought was that updating a public variable that holds the last state of the checkbox and implements INotifyPropertyChanged would resolve the issue.

– user642153
Nov 15 '18 at 15:30





@Sinatr - The checkbox is in a usercontrol separate from MainWindow where I need to hide/show the tab. My thought was that updating a public variable that holds the last state of the checkbox and implements INotifyPropertyChanged would resolve the issue.

– user642153
Nov 15 '18 at 15:30













Sure, you can implement INotifyPropertyChanged in the class holding DebugTabState, then subscribe to PropertyChanged event of class with EnableDebuggingCheckBox to rise notification for DebugTabState, but this is silly.

– Sinatr
Nov 15 '18 at 15:35





Sure, you can implement INotifyPropertyChanged in the class holding DebugTabState, then subscribe to PropertyChanged event of class with EnableDebuggingCheckBox to rise notification for DebugTabState, but this is silly.

– Sinatr
Nov 15 '18 at 15:35












1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















0














If Appdata is a public property in MainWindow, change the binding to:



<TabItem x:Name="DebugTab" Header="Debug" Visibility="Binding Path=AppData.EnableDebuggingCheckBox, Converter=StaticResource ResourceKey=BooleanToVisibility">
// Some content
</TabItem>


You can then remove MainWindow.DebugTabState.



Alternatively, in MainWindow advise to INotifyPropertyChange from AppData and raise an PropertyChanged event if EnableDebuggingCheckBox changed






share|improve this answer























  • I tried using AppData.EnableDebuggingCheckBox but that didn't work, and I'm not sure why. And I'm not exactly sure what you mean by the second suggestion. Thanks for your time!

    – user642153
    Nov 15 '18 at 15:28











  • You may look for binding errors using Snoop (github.com/cplotts/snoopwpf))

    – Klaus Gütter
    Nov 15 '18 at 19:28











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









0














If Appdata is a public property in MainWindow, change the binding to:



<TabItem x:Name="DebugTab" Header="Debug" Visibility="Binding Path=AppData.EnableDebuggingCheckBox, Converter=StaticResource ResourceKey=BooleanToVisibility">
// Some content
</TabItem>


You can then remove MainWindow.DebugTabState.



Alternatively, in MainWindow advise to INotifyPropertyChange from AppData and raise an PropertyChanged event if EnableDebuggingCheckBox changed






share|improve this answer























  • I tried using AppData.EnableDebuggingCheckBox but that didn't work, and I'm not sure why. And I'm not exactly sure what you mean by the second suggestion. Thanks for your time!

    – user642153
    Nov 15 '18 at 15:28











  • You may look for binding errors using Snoop (github.com/cplotts/snoopwpf))

    – Klaus Gütter
    Nov 15 '18 at 19:28















0














If Appdata is a public property in MainWindow, change the binding to:



<TabItem x:Name="DebugTab" Header="Debug" Visibility="Binding Path=AppData.EnableDebuggingCheckBox, Converter=StaticResource ResourceKey=BooleanToVisibility">
// Some content
</TabItem>


You can then remove MainWindow.DebugTabState.



Alternatively, in MainWindow advise to INotifyPropertyChange from AppData and raise an PropertyChanged event if EnableDebuggingCheckBox changed






share|improve this answer























  • I tried using AppData.EnableDebuggingCheckBox but that didn't work, and I'm not sure why. And I'm not exactly sure what you mean by the second suggestion. Thanks for your time!

    – user642153
    Nov 15 '18 at 15:28











  • You may look for binding errors using Snoop (github.com/cplotts/snoopwpf))

    – Klaus Gütter
    Nov 15 '18 at 19:28













0












0








0







If Appdata is a public property in MainWindow, change the binding to:



<TabItem x:Name="DebugTab" Header="Debug" Visibility="Binding Path=AppData.EnableDebuggingCheckBox, Converter=StaticResource ResourceKey=BooleanToVisibility">
// Some content
</TabItem>


You can then remove MainWindow.DebugTabState.



Alternatively, in MainWindow advise to INotifyPropertyChange from AppData and raise an PropertyChanged event if EnableDebuggingCheckBox changed






share|improve this answer













If Appdata is a public property in MainWindow, change the binding to:



<TabItem x:Name="DebugTab" Header="Debug" Visibility="Binding Path=AppData.EnableDebuggingCheckBox, Converter=StaticResource ResourceKey=BooleanToVisibility">
// Some content
</TabItem>


You can then remove MainWindow.DebugTabState.



Alternatively, in MainWindow advise to INotifyPropertyChange from AppData and raise an PropertyChanged event if EnableDebuggingCheckBox changed







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Nov 15 '18 at 15:06









Klaus GütterKlaus Gütter

2,60231422




2,60231422












  • I tried using AppData.EnableDebuggingCheckBox but that didn't work, and I'm not sure why. And I'm not exactly sure what you mean by the second suggestion. Thanks for your time!

    – user642153
    Nov 15 '18 at 15:28











  • You may look for binding errors using Snoop (github.com/cplotts/snoopwpf))

    – Klaus Gütter
    Nov 15 '18 at 19:28

















  • I tried using AppData.EnableDebuggingCheckBox but that didn't work, and I'm not sure why. And I'm not exactly sure what you mean by the second suggestion. Thanks for your time!

    – user642153
    Nov 15 '18 at 15:28











  • You may look for binding errors using Snoop (github.com/cplotts/snoopwpf))

    – Klaus Gütter
    Nov 15 '18 at 19:28
















I tried using AppData.EnableDebuggingCheckBox but that didn't work, and I'm not sure why. And I'm not exactly sure what you mean by the second suggestion. Thanks for your time!

– user642153
Nov 15 '18 at 15:28





I tried using AppData.EnableDebuggingCheckBox but that didn't work, and I'm not sure why. And I'm not exactly sure what you mean by the second suggestion. Thanks for your time!

– user642153
Nov 15 '18 at 15:28













You may look for binding errors using Snoop (github.com/cplotts/snoopwpf))

– Klaus Gütter
Nov 15 '18 at 19:28





You may look for binding errors using Snoop (github.com/cplotts/snoopwpf))

– Klaus Gütter
Nov 15 '18 at 19:28



















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