I'm trying to implement drag and drop functionality in a Surface Application that is built using the MVVM pattern. I'm struggling to come up with a means to implement this while adhering to the MVVM pattern. Though I'm trying to do this within a Surface Application I think the solution is general enough to apply to WPF as well.
I'm trying to produce the following functionality:
- User contacts a FrameworkElement within a ScatterViewItem to begin a drag operation (a specific part of the ScatterViewItem initiates the drag/drop functionality)
- When the drag operation begins a copy of that ScatterViewItem is created and imposed upon the original ScatterViewItem, the copy is what the user will drag and ultimately drop
- The user can drop the item onto another ScatterViewItem (placed in a separate ScatterView)
The overall interaction is quite similar to the ShoppingCart application provided in the Surface SDK, except that the source objects are contained within a ScatterView rather than a ListBox.
I'm unsure how to proceeded in order to enable the proper communication between my ViewModels in order to provide this functionality. The main issue I've encountered is replicating the ScatterViewItem when the user contacts the FrameworkElement.
I had a go at getting Steve Psaltis's idea working. It took a while - custom dependency properties are easy to get wrong. It looks to me like the
SetXXX
is the wrong place to put your side-effects - WPF doesn't have to go though there, it can go directly toDependencyObject.SetValue
, but thePropertyChangedCallback
will always be called.So, here's complete and working the code for the custom attached property:
In the XAML markup where you want to use this, you can do e.g.
.. And the rest is just making sure that your ViewModel, bindings and command is right.
This version passes an
IDataObject
through to the command which seems better to me - you can query it for files or whatever in the command. But that's just a current preference, not an essential feature of the answer.You could use an attached property. Create an attached property and in the setproperty method bind to the droped event :
Then you can bind a command in your view model to the relevant control on the view. Obviously you may want to make your attached property apply to your specific control type rather than a listview.
Hope that helps.