15
votes

I have a ListBox. It has internal ScrollViewer, so I can scroll ListBox content with mouse wheel. It works fine until I set item template that contains another ListBox (in fact, I have 4 nested ListBoxes =)). Problem is that internal ListBox's ScrollViewer steals wheeling event. Is there any easy way to prevent this behavior?


I had ListBox with ItemContainerStyle like this:

<Style x:Key="ListBoxItemStyle" TargetType="{x:Type ListBoxItem}">
    <Setter Property="BorderBrush" Value="Black"/>
     ... 
</Style>
<ListBox ItemContainerStyle="{StaticResource ListBoxItemStyle}" />

How can I set style for ItemContainer's item border in resources like this? As I know ContentPresenter is item container of ItemsControl. But it hasn't Border, so I can't style it.

6

6 Answers

59
votes

You can remove the ScrollViewer from a ListBox by changing its control template to something much simpler:

<ListBox>
    <ListBox.Template>
        <ControlTemplate>
            <ItemsPresenter />
        </ControlTemplate>
    </ListBox.Template>
    ...
</ListBox>

However, I question the value of nesting ListBoxes. Remember that each ListBox is a Selector and has a concept of which item is "selected". Does it really make sense to have a selected item inside a selected item, inside a selected item?

I would suggest changing the "inner" ListBoxes to simple ItemsControls so that the nested lists can't have selected items. That would make for a much simpler user experience. You may still need to retemplate the inner ItemsControls in the same way to remove the scrollbars, but at least the user won't get confused about which item is "selected".

11
votes

You can disable stealing scroll events by catching scroll event in XAML:

<ListBox PreviewMouseWheel="ScrollViewer_PreviewMouseWheel">

and re-publishing it in Code behind:

private void ScrollViewer_PreviewMouseWheel(object sender, MouseWheelEventArgs e)
    {
        if (sender is ListBox && !e.Handled)
        {
            e.Handled = true;
            var eventArg = new MouseWheelEventArgs(e.MouseDevice, e.Timestamp, e.Delta);
            eventArg.RoutedEvent = UIElement.MouseWheelEvent;
            eventArg.Source = sender;
            var parent = ((Control)sender).Parent as UIElement;
            parent.RaiseEvent(eventArg);
        }
    }

The solution is exactly for ListBox, it helped me with ListView.

I found this solution here:

https://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/vstudio/en-US/3a3bb6b0-e088-494d-8ef2-60814415fd89/swallowing-mouse-scroll?forum=wpf

2
votes

Sorry for waking up such a old post. Actually, you can disable the ScrollViewer by using ScrollViewer's attached property.

<ListBox ScrollViewer.HorizontalScrollBarVisibility="Disabled"
         ScrollViewer.VerticalScrollBarVisibility="Disabled" ...
</ListBox>
2
votes

I like to create a behavior for this type of thing.

xmlns:bhv="http://schemas.microsoft.com/xaml/behaviors"

<ListView ItemsSource="{Binding Items}">
    <bhv:Interaction.Behaviors>
        <bhvs:NoScrollingBehavior/>
    </bhv:Interaction.Behaviors>
</ListView>

The behavior itself.

public class NoScrollingBehavior : Behavior<UIElement>
{
    public NoScrollingBehavior()
    { }

    protected override void OnAttached()
    {
        base.OnAttached();
        AssociatedObject.PreviewMouseWheel += PreviewMouseWheel;
    }

    protected override void OnDetaching()
    {
        AssociatedObject.PreviewMouseWheel -= PreviewMouseWheel;
        base.OnDetaching();
    }

    private void PreviewMouseWheel(object sender, MouseWheelEventArgs e)
    {
        e.Handled = true;
        var eventArg = new MouseWheelEventArgs(e.MouseDevice, e.Timestamp, e.Delta);
        eventArg.RoutedEvent = UIElement.MouseWheelEvent;
        eventArg.Source = sender;
        var parent = ((Control)sender).Parent as UIElement;
        parent.RaiseEvent(eventArg);
    }
}
0
votes

Here is a variant with DependencyProperty, if you don't like behaviors

public class IgnoreScrollingBehavior
{
    public static readonly DependencyProperty IgnoreScrollingProperty =
        DependencyProperty.RegisterAttached("IgnoreScrolling", typeof(bool),
            typeof(IgnoreScrollingBehavior), new UIPropertyMetadata(false, OnIgnoreScrollingChanged));

    public static bool GetIgnoreScrolling(UIElement uIElement)
    {
        return (bool)uIElement.GetValue(IgnoreScrollingProperty);
    }

    public static void SetIgnoreScrolling(UIElement uIElement, bool value)
    {
        uIElement.SetValue(IgnoreScrollingProperty, value);
    }

    private static void OnIgnoreScrollingChanged(DependencyObject depOpj, DependencyPropertyChangedEventArgs e)
    {
        if (depOpj is not UIElement item)
        {
            return;
        }

        if (e.NewValue is bool boolean)
        {
            if (boolean)
            {
                item.PreviewMouseWheel += OnPreviewMouseWheel;
            }
            else
            {
                item.PreviewMouseWheel -= OnPreviewMouseWheel;
            }
        }
    }

    private static void OnPreviewMouseWheel(object sender, MouseWheelEventArgs e)
    {
        e.Handled = true;
        MouseWheelEventArgs eventArg = new(e.MouseDevice, e.Timestamp, e.Delta)
        {
            RoutedEvent = UIElement.MouseWheelEvent,
            Source = sender
        };
        UIElement parent = ((Control)sender).Parent as UIElement;
        parent.RaiseEvent(eventArg);
    }
}

This is how it is used

<Listbox b:IgnoreScrollingBehavior.IgnoreScrolling="True".../>
-1
votes

You can use this ! No Wheel stolen.

<ListBox ScrollViewer.HorizontalScrollBarVisibility="Disabled"
     ScrollViewer.VerticalScrollBarVisibility="Disabled" ...
</ListBox>