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57

answers:

1

I have a recursively defined user control that needs the following properties:

there are two columns

the first contains a single border around some text

the second column contains a stack of these same type of controls (the recursive part)

if the box in the first column is shorter than the total height of the stacked boxes in the second column, the box should expand to make both columns the same height.

If the total height of the second column is shorter than the box in the first column, then the last item in the second column's stack should expand so they are the same height.

so for example, it might look like this:

alt text

Ok, so far what I have done is create a horizontal stack panel where the first item is a dock-panel containing a border and text... the second column is a vertical stack panel bound to a sublist, creating the recursive user control... like this..

<StackPanel Orientation="Horizontal" Background="AliceBlue">
        <local:TMRequirementView Requirement="{Binding Baseline}" />
        <StackPanel Orientation="Vertical">
            <ItemsControl ItemsSource="{Binding Requirements}">
                <ItemsControl.ItemTemplate>
                    <DataTemplate>
                        <local:TMGridView Baseline="{Binding}" />
                    </DataTemplate>
                </ItemsControl.ItemTemplate>
            </ItemsControl>
        </StackPanel>

Where the requirement looks like this:

    <DockPanel>
        <Border MinHeight="50"
                BorderBrush="Black" BorderThickness="2">
            <TextBlock Text="{Binding Description}" 
                       TextWrapping="Wrap" Background="Transparent" Height="Auto" />
        </Border>
    </DockPanel>

Now this works great if the stacked column is taller, but it doesn't work if the first column is taller, and I get gaps. Any idea how to handle this mutual height dependency?


Update: So by adding a border around the right columns stack panel, I was able to see that the stackpanel actually did receive the min-height changes. However, even though there was room to expand, the children of the stack panel didn't automatically update. If I fix the minheight of the stack panel before hand to something large, the children fill up. What I need to figure out is how to update the chidren's height based on changes to the stack panel's min-height.

+1  A: 

I think the Grid in this layout does what you describe. I put it in a DockPanel so that you can see how it resizes. Try typing stuff into the text boxes and watch how it behaves:

<Page
  xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"
  xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml"&gt;
  <DockPanel>  
    <Grid DockPanel.Dock="Top">
      <Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
        <ColumnDefinition Width="*"/>
        <ColumnDefinition Width="*"/>
      </Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
      <Grid.RowDefinitions>
        <RowDefinition Height="Auto"/>
        <RowDefinition Height="Auto"/>
        <RowDefinition Height="*"/>
      </Grid.RowDefinitions>
      <TextBox AcceptsReturn="True" Grid.Row="0" Grid.Column="0" Grid.RowSpan="3"></TextBox>
      <TextBox AcceptsReturn="True" Grid.Row="0" Grid.Column="1"></TextBox>
      <TextBox AcceptsReturn="True" Grid.Row="1" Grid.Column="1"></TextBox>
      <TextBox AcceptsReturn="True" Grid.Row="2" Grid.Column="1"></TextBox>
    </Grid>
    <TextBlock/>
  </DockPanel>
</Page>

All three rows of the Grid will have the height of a TextBox at a minimum (when you replace the TextBoxes with other elements, you'll need to set minimum heights to keep them from vanishing if they're empty). Since the third row is star-sized, it will size itself to all remaining vertical space left after the first two rows are arranged. So if there's a bunch of content in the first column, the third row in the second column gets taller.

Edit

Actually, there's no reason to even screw around with a Grid in this case: What you're describing is really the behavior of the DockPanel:

<DockPanel>
  <DockPanel DockPanel.Dock="Top">      
    <DockPanel.Resources>
      <Style TargetType="Label">
        <Setter Property="DockPanel.Dock" Value="Top"/>
        <Setter Property="Background" Value="Lavender"/>
        <Setter Property="Margin" Value="1"/>
      </Style>
    </DockPanel.Resources>
    <DockPanel LastChildFill="True">
      <Label>Foo</Label>
    </DockPanel>
    <DockPanel LastChildFill="True">
      <Label>Foo</Label>
      <Label>Bar</Label>
      <Label>Baz</Label>
      <Label>Bat</Label>
    </DockPanel>
  </DockPanel>
  <Label/>
</DockPanel>
Robert Rossney
I originally had a grid, but was having so much trouble with the data binding for a recursive element, I ended up switching to a stack panel approach... I can revisit this as you suggest, but if you also happen to think of an approach for the formatting with a stack panel, let me know!
tbischel
So I'm running into the same problem as I had last time.. how do I bind the grid to dynamic row definitions in XAML?
tbischel