views:

1069

answers:

3

Is there any way to have to tabcontrol take the size of the largest tab item (well, actually, the tabitem's content)?

Since the tabcontrol has no specific size assigned it should autosize: it does that correctly, but when you switch tabs it automatically resizes itself to the height (and width) of the contents of the currently selected tab.

I don't want the resizing to happen, and let the tabcontrol assume the height of the largest item, but still have it autosize itself.

Any clues? I tried databinding to the Height property of each element used as content to the using a multibinding, with bindings on both the ActualHeight and the Items properties of the Tabcontrol. But alas, the ActualHeight of the content elements is always 0.

        <TabItem Header="Core" > 
            <Grid Margin="5">
                <Grid.Height>
                    <MultiBinding Converter="{Converters1:AllTabContentEqualHeightConverter}">
                        <Binding Path="ActualHeight" RelativeSource="{RelativeSource Mode=FindAncestor, AncestorType={x:Type TabControl}}"/>
                        <Binding Path="Items" RelativeSource="{RelativeSource Mode=FindAncestor, AncestorType={x:Type TabControl}}"/>
                    </MultiBinding>
                </Grid.Height>

            ...

Can this be done?

+4  A: 

The problem is that the TabControl unloads and reloads its content as you switch tabs. Therefore it only knows about the size of the content in the currently active tab. You should be able to change the TabControl such that it never destroys its children, and they are always present (but maybe hidden).

This blog post by Eric Burke should get you started. From what I can tell by skimming his post, you will need to change it such that:

  • All children are loaded when the TabControl is loaded.
  • Children are hidden rather than collapsed when they are inactive

HTH, Kent

Kent Boogaart
That seems a good approach, but I just solved it myself. Thanks anyway.
Inferis
A: 

It's probably not in the proper WPF way, but, if you already have all the content elements, you could maybe loop through them on load and set the height of the TabControl programatically.

Tiberiu Ana
A: 

Actually, it was easier to solve that I thought. Since I had a controltemplate for the TabControl anyway, I set the height of the ContentPresenter presenting the selected tab content. I do this using a converter that binds to the items of the TabControl, measures them if necessary (using Measure) and checks DesiredSize for the size I need.

    public object Convert(object value, Type targetType, object parameter, CultureInfo culture)
    {
        var items = value as ItemCollection;

        if (items == null)
            return null;

        double max = 0;
        foreach (TabItem item in items)
        {
            var content = item.Content as FrameworkElement;
            if (content == null) continue;

            if (!content.IsMeasureValid)
                content.Measure(new Size(int.MaxValue, int.MaxValue));

            var height = content.DesiredSize.Height;
            if (max < height)
                max = height;
        }

        return max;
    }

That works just fine, with some caveats:

  • every tab content should be a FrameworkElement
  • the contents don't change size once they are loaded (because the converter is only called when the Items property changes, ie just once).
Inferis