37
votes

This cannot be this difficult. The TreeView in WPF doesn't allow you to set the SelectedItem, saying that the property is ReadOnly. I have the TreeView populating, even updating when it's databound collection changes.

I just need to know what item is selected. I am using MVVM, so there is no codebehind or variable to reference the treeview by. This is the only solution I have found, but it is an obvious hack, it creates another element in XAML that uses ElementName binding to set itself to the treeviews selected item, which you must then bind your Viewmodel too. Several other questions are asked about this, but no other working solutions are given.

I have seen this question, but using the answer given gives me compile errors, for some reason I cannot add a reference to the blend sdk System.Windows.Interactivity to my project. It says "unknown error system.windows has not been preloaded" and I haven't yet figured out how to get past that.

For Bonus Points: why the hell did Microsoft make this element's SelectedItem property ReadOnly?

6
There is a way with attached properties, I'll create an answerBas
Or you can just use the codebehind to handle this for you. The lack of a bindable SelectedItem in the treeview is a well known defect. And I do call it a defect, because a simple workaround can provide for a solution.user1228
One of the easiest ways probably: stackoverflow.com/questions/1238304/…JoanComasFdz

6 Answers

53
votes

You should not really need to deal with the SelectedItem property directly, bind IsSelected to a property on your viewmodel and keep track of the selected item there.

A sketch:

<TreeView ItemsSource="{Binding TreeData}">
    <TreeView.ItemContainerStyle>
        <Style TargetType="{x:Type TreeViewItem}">
            <Setter Property="IsSelected" Value="{Binding IsSelected}" />
        </Style>
    </TreeView.ItemContainerStyle>
</TreeView>
public class TViewModel : INotifyPropertyChanged
{
    private static object _selectedItem = null;
    // This is public get-only here but you could implement a public setter which
    // also selects the item.
    // Also this should be moved to an instance property on a VM for the whole tree, 
    // otherwise there will be conflicts for more than one tree.
    public static object SelectedItem
    {
        get { return _selectedItem; }
        private set
        {
            if (_selectedItem != value)
            {
                _selectedItem = value;
                OnSelectedItemChanged();
            }
        }
    }

    static virtual void OnSelectedItemChanged()
    {
        // Raise event / do other things
    }

    private bool _isSelected;
    public bool IsSelected
    {
        get { return _isSelected; }
        set
        {
            if (_isSelected != value)
            {
                _isSelected = value;
                OnPropertyChanged("IsSelected");
                if (_isSelected)
                {
                    SelectedItem = this;
                }
            }
        }
    }

    public event PropertyChangedEventHandler PropertyChanged;
    protected virtual void OnPropertyChanged(string propertyName)
    {
        var handler = this.PropertyChanged;
        if (handler != null)
            handler(this, new PropertyChangedEventArgs(propertyName));
    }
}
12
votes

You can create an attached property that is bindable and has a getter and setter:

public class TreeViewHelper
{
    private static Dictionary<DependencyObject, TreeViewSelectedItemBehavior> behaviors = new Dictionary<DependencyObject, TreeViewSelectedItemBehavior>();

    public static object GetSelectedItem(DependencyObject obj)
    {
        return (object)obj.GetValue(SelectedItemProperty);
    }

    public static void SetSelectedItem(DependencyObject obj, object value)
    {
        obj.SetValue(SelectedItemProperty, value);
    }

    // Using a DependencyProperty as the backing store for SelectedItem.  This enables animation, styling, binding, etc...
    public static readonly DependencyProperty SelectedItemProperty =
        DependencyProperty.RegisterAttached("SelectedItem", typeof(object), typeof(TreeViewHelper), new UIPropertyMetadata(null, SelectedItemChanged));

    private static void SelectedItemChanged(DependencyObject obj, DependencyPropertyChangedEventArgs e)
    {
        if (!(obj is TreeView))
            return;

        if (!behaviors.ContainsKey(obj))
            behaviors.Add(obj, new TreeViewSelectedItemBehavior(obj as TreeView));

        TreeViewSelectedItemBehavior view = behaviors[obj];
        view.ChangeSelectedItem(e.NewValue);
    }

    private class TreeViewSelectedItemBehavior
    {
        TreeView view;
        public TreeViewSelectedItemBehavior(TreeView view)
        {
            this.view = view;
            view.SelectedItemChanged += (sender, e) => SetSelectedItem(view, e.NewValue);
        }

        internal void ChangeSelectedItem(object p)
        {
            TreeViewItem item = (TreeViewItem)view.ItemContainerGenerator.ContainerFromItem(p);
            item.IsSelected = true;
        }
    }
}

Add the namespace declaration containing that class to your XAML and bind as follows (local is how I named the namespace declaration):

<TreeView ItemsSource="{Binding Path=Root.Children}"
          local:TreeViewHelper.SelectedItem="{Binding Path=SelectedItem, Mode=TwoWay}"/>

Now you can bind the selected item, and also set it in your view model to change it programmatically, should that requirement ever arise. This is, of course, assuming that you implement INotifyPropertyChanged on that particular property.

11
votes

A very unusual but quite effective way to solve this in a MVVM-acceptable way is the following:

  1. Create a visibility-collapsed ContentControl on the same View the TreeView is. Name it appropriately, and bind its Content to some SelectedSomething property in viewmodel. This ContentControl will "hold" the selected object and handle it's binding, OneWayToSource;
  2. Listen to the SelectedItemChanged in TreeView, and add a handler in code-behind to set your ContentControl.Content to the newly selected item.

XAML:

<ContentControl x:Name="SelectedItemHelper" Content="{Binding SelectedObject, Mode=OneWayToSource}" Visibility="Collapsed"/>
<TreeView ItemsSource="{Binding SomeCollection}"
    SelectedItemChanged="TreeView_SelectedItemChanged">

Code Behind:

    private void TreeView_SelectedItemChanged(object sender, RoutedPropertyChangedEventArgs<object> e)
    {
        SelectedItemHelper.Content = e.NewValue;
    }

ViewModel:

    public object SelectedObject  // Class is not actually "object"
    {
        get { return _selected_object; }
        set
        {
            _selected_object = value;
            RaisePropertyChanged(() => SelectedObject);
            Console.WriteLine(SelectedObject);
        }
    }
    object _selected_object;
5
votes

Use the OneWayToSource binding mode. This doesn't work. See edit.

Edit: Looks like this is a bug or "by design" behavior from Microsoft, according to this question; there are some workarounds posted, though. Do any of those work for your TreeView?

The Microsoft Connect issue: https://connect.microsoft.com/WPF/feedback/details/523865/read-only-dependency-properties-does-not-support-onewaytosource-bindings

Posted by Microsoft on 1/10/2010 at 2:46 PM

We cannot do this in WPF today, for the same reason we cannot support bindings on properties that are not DependencyProperties. The runtime per-instance state of a binding is held in a BindingExpression, which we store in the EffectiveValueTable for the target DependencyObject. When the target property is not a DP or the DP is read-only, there's no place to store the BindingExpression.

It's possible we may some day choose to extend binding functionality to these two scenarios. We get asked about them pretty frequently. In other words, your request is already on our list of features to consider in future releases.

Thanks for your feedback.

2
votes

I decided to use a combination of code behind and viewmodel code. the xaml is like this:

<TreeView 
                    Name="tvCountries"
                ItemsSource="{Binding Path=Countries}"
                ItemTemplate="{StaticResource ResourceKey=countryTemplate}"   
                    SelectedValuePath="Name"
                    SelectedItemChanged="tvCountries_SelectedItemChanged">

Code behind

private void tvCountries_SelectedItemChanged(object sender, RoutedPropertyChangedEventArgs<object> e)
    {
        var vm = this.FindResource("vm") as ViewModels.CoiEditorViewModel;
        if (vm != null)
        {
            var treeItem = sender as TreeView;
            vm.TreeItemSelected = treeItem.SelectedItem;
        }
    }

And in the viewmodel there is a TreeItemSelected object which you can then access in the viewmodel.

1
votes

You can always create a DependencyProperty that uses ICommand and listen to the SelectedItemChanged event on the TreeView. This can be a bit easier than binding IsSelected, but I imagine you will wind up binding IsSelected anyway for other reasons. If you just want to bind on IsSelected you can always have your item send a message whenever IsSelected changes. Then you can listen to those messages anyplace in your program.