I'm making a program for viewing images and I met with a problem that wide pictures go beyond the window.
I set the property "stretch" to "uniform" but it doesn't work with wide pictures. What can I do?
An example of this problem:
And if I expand window it will be this
This is XAML of image:
<Grid Grid.Row="1">
<Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<ColumnDefinition MinWidth="300" Width="0.1*"/>
<ColumnDefinition Width="Auto"/>
<ColumnDefinition MinWidth="300" Width="*"/>
</Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<TreeView Style="{StaticResource BorderStyle}" ScrollViewer.VerticalScrollBarVisibility="Auto" Name="folders" Grid.Row="0" Grid.Column="0" TreeViewItem.Expanded="treeView_Expanded">
<TreeView.ItemTemplate>
<HierarchicalDataTemplate ItemsSource="{Binding Nodes}">
<StackPanel>
<Label HorizontalAlignment="Stretch" Cursor="Hand" Content="{Binding fileName}" Foreground="#FFF"/>
</StackPanel>
</HierarchicalDataTemplate>
</TreeView.ItemTemplate>
</TreeView>
<GridSplitter Margin="-5 5 -5 5" Cursor="SizeWE" Grid.Row="0" Grid.Column="1" VerticalAlignment="Stretch" ShowsPreview="False" Width="5" HorizontalAlignment="Center" Background="Transparent"/>
<Border Style="{StaticResource BorderStyle}" Grid.Row="0" Grid.Column="2">
<Image Name="ImageViewer"/>
</Border>
</Grid>
The image is sizing itself to its parent, but the MinWidth="300" in your first and third grid column definitions is forcing the parent to be wider than the window. MinWidth overrides Width if the two disagree.
If you change to these values, it won't do that any more except when the window is too narrow to be much use anyway:
<Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<ColumnDefinition MinWidth="30" Width="*"/>
<ColumnDefinition Width="Auto"/>
<ColumnDefinition MinWidth="30" Width="4*"/>
</Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
I'm not sure what you were getting at with what you had: The number/* Width values (the System.Windows.GridLength structure, whose documentation meets the usual regrettable standard of WPF documentation) work in a not immediately obvious way. The following creates three columns. The middle one is sized to its content. The first one uses one eleventh of the remaining space; the last one uses ten elevenths of the remaining space. "*" means "1*". We add all the numeric values and pro-rate the available space accordingly.
<Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<ColumnDefinition Width="0.1*"/>
<ColumnDefinition Width="Auto"/>
<ColumnDefinition Width="*"/>
</Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
That's exactly equivalent to this:
<Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<ColumnDefinition Width="1*"/>
<ColumnDefinition Width="Auto"/>
<ColumnDefinition Width="10*"/>
</Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
It's proportional.
So your MinWidth values seem wrong to me, unless you have a truly enviable monitor setup. What I've given you will make the image area four times the width of the left sidebar, which is a rough guess at what you seem to be looking for. I like those proportions.
Related
I have a problem designing my GUI in wpf.
How do i set the Grid ColumnDefinition Width dynamically,
I have a expander. And when the expander is clicked the grid should also expand and adjust with the size of the expander
As of now i have this GUI
enter image description here
And this is the xaml code
<Grid>
<Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<ColumnDefinition Width="127"/>
<ColumnDefinition Width="665*"/>
</Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<Expander Background="Gray" x:Name="expander" ExpandDirection="Right" Expanded="Expander_Expanded" >
<Expander.Header>
<TextBlock Text="Objects">
<TextBlock.LayoutTransform>
<RotateTransform Angle="-90"/>
</TextBlock.LayoutTransform>
</TextBlock>
</Expander.Header>
<StackPanel Margin="10,4,0,0">
<CheckBox Margin="4" Content="Option 1" />
<CheckBox Margin="4" Content="Option 2" />
<CheckBox Margin="4" Content="Option 3" />
</StackPanel>
<!-- Stuff XD -->
</Expander>
<Grid Grid.Column="1" Background="Red"/>
</Grid>
As of now the ColomnDefinition width is 127
I want it to adjust to at least 30. So the window will be filled with other stuff
like this
enter image description here
But my problem is how do i expand the grid when the expander is expanded.
And another thing. I can't get the size of the expander when expanded. It gives me NaN which i can't use to set the columndefinition width
Thank you so much. Sorry for my bad english
Use Auto in first column Width and it will define size of expander based on content.
If you would like that column "0" has some min Width just set the property MinWidth. (but in that case I will not recommend, but show below)
<Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<ColumnDefinition Width="Auto" MinWidth="30"/>
<ColumnDefinition Width="*"/>
</Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
Also I will recommend use GridSplitter, then you will have splitter between two columns that allows to change width of columns by user in UI
<Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<ColumnDefinition Width="Auto" MinWidth="30"/>
<ColumnDefinition Width="5"/>
<ColumnDefinition Width="*"/>
</Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<GridSplitter Grid.Column="1" HorizontalAlignment="Stretch" VerticalAlignment="Stretch" Background="DarkSalmon"/>
Also in expander you can only have one user-control, so "stuff" you said need to be inside some layout control like stack-panel,dock or another grid etc.
Let me know if it works as you expected.
Trying to use GridSplitter but it's not working. Dragging the splitter to the left is fine, but dragging to the right has no effect. I think the Right grid is the problem. But I'm not sure. Please give me some advice.
Here is my code:
<Grid>
<Grid.RowDefinitions>
<RowDefinition Height="100"/>
<RowDefinition Height="{DynamicResource DefaultMargin}"/>
<RowDefinition/>
</Grid.RowDefinitions>
<Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<ColumnDefinition MinWidth="100"/>
<ColumnDefinition x:Name="columnDefinition_One" Width="{DynamicResource DefaultMargin}"/>
<ColumnDefinition x:Name="columnDefinition_Two" MinWidth="230" Width="{Binding ActualWidth, ElementName=Element1}"/>
</Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<Grid x:Name="Layout" Grid.Row="2" Grid.Column="0">
</Grid>
<GridSplitter x:Name="gridSplitter" HorizontalAlignment="Stretch" VerticalAlignment="Stretch" ResizeDirection="Columns" ResizeBehavior="PreviousAndNext" Grid.Column="1" Grid.Row="2" Background="{StaticResource DarkGray}" />
<Grid x:Name="grid_MonitoringView" Grid.Row="2" Grid.Column="2" Style="{DynamicResource DefaultPanel}" HorizontalAlignment="Stretch">
<Border>
<view1:ViewExample x:Name="viewExample"/>
</Border>
</Grid>
</Grid>
I copied your code into my demo project, and it works fine for me. #lomed found that you might have an incorrect MinWidth value and I agree with that too. But you say that your 'grid_MonitoringView' has not been affected.
Do you notice that my right border layout correctly? So the real problem is ViewExample class. Your ViewExample has incorrect layout values such as MinWidth or other visuals inside with larger layout width.
the GridSplitter cant reduce width of column than their MinWidth value.
You'll see it works fine if you maximize the window,
or for demostartion try remove the MinWidth value:
<ColumnDefinition />
<ColumnDefinition x:Name="columnDefinition_One" Width="50"/>
<ColumnDefinition x:Name="columnDefinition_Two"/>
On my Window, I've got a GroupBox. I'd like to build out a horizontally aligned form inside of that GroupBox. By horizontally aligned, I mean a form where the label and the input reside on the same grid row or x axis. Separate form labels + inputs reside on their own row.
Since a GroupBox can only have one child content, I assume I need to either use a Grid or StackPanel. I'm trying to use a StackPanel because that seems simpler and should achieve what I'm aiming for.
The issue I'm trying to figure out is how to group the input and label into one unit so they can reside horizontally next to each other, but stack vertically as a pair within the StackPanel.
It's probably best to use a Grid that way you an get the labels and inputs to line up vertically. While it's not impossible with a stack panel it's a whole lot harder. If you set the grid's RowDefinition heights to "Auto" the grid will only be as tall as it needs to be:
<GroupBox>
<Grid>
<Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<ColumnDefinition Width="Auto"/>
<ColumnDefinition Width="*"/>
</Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<Grid.RowDefinitions>
<RowDefinition Height="Auto"/>
<RowDefinition Height="Auto"/>
<RowDefinition Height="Auto"/>
</Grid.RowDefinitions>
<TextBlock Grid.Row="0" Grid.Column="0" Text="Label1"/>
<TextBox Grid.Row="0" Grid.Column="1" Text="{Binding Input1}"/>
<TextBlock Grid.Row="1" Grid.Column="0" Text="Label2"/>
<TextBox Grid.Row="1" Grid.Column="1" Text="{Binding Input2}"/>
etc.
</Grid>
</GroupBox>
You'll probably need to play around with margins and/or padding and horizontal alignments to get the layout exactly how you want it, but this should give you the control you need to achieve what you want.
you can use a stackpanel with orientation equal to vertical inside your groupbox and inside that stackpanel you can have another stackpanel with orientation equal to horizantal for your label and input just like following sample code.
<GroupBox Header="Sample GroupBox">
<StackPanel Orientation="Vertical">
<StackPanel Name="input1" Orientation="Horizontal">
<Label Content="input1"/>
<TextBox/>
</StackPanel>
<StackPanel Name="input2" Orientation="Horizontal">
<Label Content="input2"/>
<TextBox/>
</StackPanel>
<StackPanel Name="input3" Orientation="Horizontal">
<Label Content="input3"/>
<TextBox/>
</StackPanel>
</StackPanel>
</GroupBox>
One feature you might find useful is grid shared size scope. It can help you align elements in multiple different Grids, by sharing their column\row sizes, like this:
<GroupBox Header="Sample GroupBox">
<StackPanel Orientation="Vertical" Grid.IsSharedSizeScope="True">
<Grid>
<Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<ColumnDefinition Width="Auto" SharedSizeGroup="firstGroup" />
<ColumnDefinition Width="Auto" SharedSizeGroup="secondGroup" />
</Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<Label Content="input11" Grid.Column="0" />
<TextBox Grid.Column="1" Width="100"/>
</Grid>
<Grid>
<Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<ColumnDefinition Width="Auto" SharedSizeGroup="firstGroup" />
<ColumnDefinition Width="Auto" SharedSizeGroup="secondGroup" />
</Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<Label Content="input2222222" Grid.Column="0" />
<TextBox Grid.Column="1"/>
</Grid>
<Grid>
<Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<ColumnDefinition Width="Auto" SharedSizeGroup="firstGroup" />
<ColumnDefinition Width="Auto" SharedSizeGroup="secondGroup" />
</Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<Label Content="input3333333333333" Grid.Column="0" />
<TextBox Grid.Column="1"/>
</Grid>
</StackPanel>
</GroupBox>
I don't say that it is necessary in the code above, but that is just example. Often, you want to use grid in for example ItemTemplate of ItemsControl, and you want all items to be aligned. Here shared size scope might help.
I have this XAML code:
<StackPanel Orientation="Horizontal" Margin="0">
<ScrollViewer VerticalScrollBarVisibility="Auto">
<StackPanel x:Name="Miniaturas" Orientation="Vertical" MinWidth="100" Width="Auto" Grid.Column="0" Height="Auto" ScrollViewer.CanContentScroll="True">
</StackPanel>
</ScrollViewer>
<Grid Margin="1">
<WindowsFormsHost x:Name="VistaPrevia" Width="Auto"/>
</Grid>
</StackPanel>
What I'm trying to do is simulate two columns. Why? because WindowsFormsHost Can't be stored into ColumnDefinition it throws this error:
Can't add value Type "WindowsFormHost" to a dictionary or collection of type "ColumnDefinitionCollection.
Usually I Do this with this code:
<Grid Margin="1">
<Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<ColumnDefinition Width="120"/>
<ColumnDefinition Width="*"/>
</Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<WindowsFormsHost x:Name="VistaPrevia" Width="Auto"/>
</Grid>
How can I do to obtaind the same efect without using ColumnDefinition
Note: I need two columns one with fixed width size and another that uses the remaining width of the window.
Pull down VS2013 express and see if that error has been fixed in the parser. Also verify you have installed update 4 for Visual Studio 2012 to see if it fixes the issue.
The error you have seen occurs because you did something like this
<Grid Margin="1">
<Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<ColumnDefinition Width="120"/>
<ColumnDefinition Width="*"/>
<WindowsFormsHost x:Name="VistaPrevia" Width="Auto"/><!-- fail -->
</Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
</Grid>
P.S.: and the answer is use Grid.
I'm designing Silverlight ChildWindow and I met one intersting problem. I defined a button on a window title as follows:
<ChildWindow.Title>
<Grid>
<Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<ColumnDefinition Width="*"/>
<ColumnDefinition Width="Auto"/>
</Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<TextBlock Text="This is textblock" Grid.Column="0"/>
<Button Content="Help" Name="btnHelp" Grid.Column="1" Width="100"
Margin="300,0,0,0" />
</Grid>
</ChildWindow.Title>
This window is resizable. When you try to resize the window, the "btnHelp" button is covered by the close button, and the "btnHelp" button is not aligned to the edge of the window also. I tried before to use a StackPanel, also I used margins in both variants (StackPanel and Grid) and they didn't help me properly. The variant in the code is latest:) Could you please give a hint, what can I do with that?
Thanks in an advance.
This is a result of what appears to be a strange choice in the ChildWindow's control template -- the Title content is not stretched, so you can't really right-align anything without hard-coding it. So, you could go ahead and just apply fixed widths to the Grid column widths:
<controls:ChildWindow.Title>
<Grid>
<Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<ColumnDefinition Width="250"/>
<ColumnDefinition Width="100"/>
</Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<TextBlock Text="This is textblock" Grid.Column="0"/>
<Button Content="Help" Name="btnHelp" Grid.Column="1" />
</Grid>
</controls:ChildWindow.Title>
That's quick-and-dirty, but not very satisfying. An alternative would be to modify the ControlTemplate (at the link above) so that it behaves how you would expect. Find the ContentControl that displays the Title, and make it stretch to fill the available space, by adding HorizontalContentAlignment="Stretch":
<Style TargetType="controls:ChildWindow" x:Key="MyChildWindowStyle">
<!-- etc ... -->
<ContentControl Content="{TemplateBinding Title}" FontWeight="Bold"
HorizontalContentAlignment="Stretch"
HorizontalAlignment="Stretch" IsTabStop="False" Margin="6,0,6,0" VerticalAlignment="Center"/>
<!-- etc ... -->
</Style>
This allows you to use the normal layout controls like Grid, and it will render as expected:
<controls:ChildWindow Style="{StaticResource MyChildWindowStyle}"
...
<controls:ChildWindow.Title>
<Grid>
<Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<ColumnDefinition Width="*"/>
<ColumnDefinition Width="Auto"/>
</Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<TextBlock Text="This is textblock" Grid.Column="0"/>
<Button Content="Help" Name="btnHelp" Grid.Column="1" Width="100"/>
</Grid>
</controls:ChildWindow.Title>