I've been using the same bit of code for several versions of my app with no problems, but I'm now mysteriously receiving NullRerefenceException
s with the following:
this.Loaded += delegate {
deleteBrush = new DeleteBrushAdorner( background );
AdornerLayer al = AdornerLayer.GetAdornerLayer( background );
al.Add( deleteBrush ); // null ref here??
};
background
is just a Border
element.
My two thoughts on what could be causing it are a) switching to .NET 4.0, and b) placing instances of the above element (which is a UserControl
) in an ItemsControl
.
Oddly this doesn't happen all the time, and it's hard to predict when it will happen, so it's not reliable.
The docs for AdornerLayer.GetAdornerLayer specify:
If no adorner layers are found, the method returns null.
So my guess is that there are no adorner layers... do you have any reason to believe that this shouldn't be the case? What guarantee are you currently relying on that there will be an adorner layer in the visual tree?
I know this is an old question but I had this issue today.
In my case I had a class that is based on Window
and GetAdornerLayer()
returned null. It turned out that the ControlTemplate
for my derived class did not contain the AdornerDecorator
. Adding that as the top level in the ControlTemplate
solved the issue.
<Style TargetType="my:MyWindow" BasedOn="{StaticResource {x:Type Window}}">
<Setter Property="Template">
<Setter.Value>
<ControlTemplate TargetType="my:MyWindow">
<AdornerDecorator>
<DockPanel ...>
</DockPanel>
</AdornerDecorator>
</ControlTemplate>
</Setter.Value>
</Setter>
</Style>
I'm curious as to whether or not this was really solved. An AdornerDecorator provides an AdornerLayer for element below it -- and everything will be below it. It is a decorator, meaning it has a Child that is the content. That content is being provided with an AdornerLayer. So, if you put an AdornerDecorator in your XAML and the child is the border, the border does have an AdornerLayer.
Furthermore, Window defines an AdornerDecorator as the top of the visual tree so any element in a Window will have an AdornerLayer above it. So, if your conent above was in a Window...