Controls (including the ListBox) don't do anything with the value of DataContext
at all. Its purpose is to provide a context for data bindings.
Lets assume you have a ListBox
"myList" and a MyData
"myData". The MyData
type has a property "People" of type ObservableCollection<Person>
and in turn the Person
type has the string properties "Forename" and "Surname".
All of the following are equivalent:-
myList.ItemsSource = myData.People;
or
myList.DataContext = myData;
myList.SetBinding(ItemsControl.ItemsSourceProperty, new Binding("People"));
or
myList.DataContext = myData.People;
myList.SetBinding(ItemsControl.ItemsSourceProperty, new Binding());
Typically though bindings are configured in Xaml and the DataContext of the LayoutRoot is assigned the data object:-
LayoutRoot.DataContext = myData;
you might have the following Xaml:-
<Grid x:Name="LayoutRoot">
<ListBox x:Name="myList" ItemsSource="{Binding People}">
<ListBox.ItemTemplate>
<DataTemplate>
<StackPanel Orientation="Horizontal">
<TextBlock Text="{Binding Forename}" Margin="2" />
<TextBlock Text="{Binding Surname}" Margin="2" />
</StackPanel>
</DataTemplate>
</ListBox.ItemTemplate>
</ListBox>
</Grid>
You'll note a couple of things here. The DataContext
of "myList" is not assigned at all. In this case the control's ancestor tree is walked until an ancestor is found that does have a value assigned to the DataContext
property.
Also each ListBoxItem
dynamically generated for each Person
instance has that Person
instance assigned as its DataContext
which is how the Forename and Surname bindings manage to work.