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1044b9d479
The ListView control provides a ScrollIntoView() method that ensures the specified item is on screen, scrolling the ListView if needed. Unfortunately this method is very slow (50-100 ms) and sometimes fails entirely on larger lists. (Yay WPF.) Because the ListView is scrolling by fixed-height item, it's possible to use the underlying ScrollViewer to move the list instantaneously and reliably. So now we do that. Also, fixed a bug with select-all, where we weren't clearing the previous selection before calling SelectAll(), leading to a mismatch with the secondary data structure that we maintain because WPF ListViews can't deal with large selections efficiently. (Yay WPF.) There's still some weird behavior, e.g. sometimes hitting F5 clears the current selection and sometimes it doesn't. I think it's related to which item has focus and the fact you're hitting a key; using the debug menu item doesn't cause the behavior. Also, increased MAX_SEL_COUNT from 2000 to 5000. That takes about 200ms to restore to a ListView on my 5-year-old system.
263 lines
10 KiB
C#
263 lines
10 KiB
C#
/*
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* Copyright 2019 faddenSoft
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*
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* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
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* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
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* You may obtain a copy of the License at
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*
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* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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*
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* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
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* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
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* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
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* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
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* limitations under the License.
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*/
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using System;
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using System.Diagnostics;
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using System.Windows;
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using System.Windows.Controls;
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using System.Windows.Controls.Primitives;
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using System.Windows.Documents;
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using System.Windows.Input;
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using System.Windows.Media;
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namespace CommonWPF {
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/// <summary>
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/// Generic Visual helper.
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/// </summary>
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public static class VisualHelper {
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/// <summary>
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/// Find a child object in a WPF visual tree.
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/// </summary>
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/// <remarks>
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/// Sample usage:
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/// GridViewHeaderRowPresenter headerRow = listView.GetVisualChild<GridViewHeaderRowPresenter>();
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///
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/// From https://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/vstudio/en-US/7d0626cb-67e8-4a09-a01e-8e56ee7411b2/gridviewcolumheader-radiobuttons?forum=wpf
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/// </remarks>
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/// <typeparam name="T"></typeparam>
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/// <param name="referenceVisual">Start point.</param>
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/// <returns>Object of appropriate type, or null if not found.</returns>
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public static T GetVisualChild<T>(this Visual referenceVisual) where T : Visual {
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Visual child = null;
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for (Int32 i = 0; i < VisualTreeHelper.GetChildrenCount(referenceVisual); i++) {
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child = VisualTreeHelper.GetChild(referenceVisual, i) as Visual;
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if (child != null && child is T) {
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break;
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} else if (child != null) {
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child = GetVisualChild<T>(child);
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if (child != null && child is T) {
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break;
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}
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}
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}
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return child as T;
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}
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}
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/// <summary>
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/// Helper functions for working with a ListView.
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///
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/// ListViews are generalized to an absurd degree, so simple things like "what column did
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/// I click on" and "what row is at the top" that were easy in WinForms are not provided
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/// by WPF.
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/// </summary>
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public static class ListViewExtensions {
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/// <summary>
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/// Figures out which item index is at the top of the window. This only works for a
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/// ListView with a VirtualizingStackPanel.
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/// </summary>
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/// <remarks>
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/// See https://stackoverflow.com/q/2926722/294248 for an alternative approach that
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/// uses hit-testing, as well as a copy of this approach.
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///
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/// Looks like we get the same values from ScrollViewer.VerticalOffset. I don't know
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/// if there's a reason to favor one over the other.
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/// </remarks>
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/// <returns>The item index, or -1 if the list is empty.</returns>
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public static int GetTopItemIndex(this ListView lv) {
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if (lv.Items.Count == 0) {
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return -1;
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}
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VirtualizingStackPanel vsp = lv.GetVisualChild<VirtualizingStackPanel>();
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if (vsp == null) {
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Debug.Assert(false, "ListView does not have a VirtualizingStackPanel");
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return -1;
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}
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return (int)vsp.VerticalOffset;
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}
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/// <summary>
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/// Scrolls the ListView so that the specified item is at the top. The standard
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/// ListView.ScrollIntoView() makes the item visible but doesn't ensure a
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/// specific placement.
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/// </summary>
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/// <remarks>
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/// Equivalent to setting myListView.TopItem in WinForms. Unfortunately, the
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/// ScrollIntoView call takes 60-100ms on a list with fewer than 1,000 items. And
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/// sometimes it just silently fails. Prefer ScrollToIndex() to this.
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/// </remarks>
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public static void ScrollToTopItem(this ListView lv, object item) {
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ScrollViewer sv = lv.GetVisualChild<ScrollViewer>();
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sv.ScrollToBottom();
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lv.ScrollIntoView(item);
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}
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/// <summary>
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/// Scrolls the ListView to the specified vertical index. The ScrollViewer should
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/// be operating in "logical" units (lines) rather than "physical" units (pixels).
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/// </summary>
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public static void ScrollToIndex(this ListView lv, int index) {
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ScrollViewer sv = lv.GetVisualChild<ScrollViewer>();
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sv.ScrollToVerticalOffset(index);
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}
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/// <summary>
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/// Returns the ListViewItem that was clicked on, or null if an LVI wasn't the target
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/// of a click (e.g. off the bottom of the list).
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/// </summary>
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public static ListViewItem GetClickedItem(this ListView lv, MouseButtonEventArgs e) {
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DependencyObject dep = (DependencyObject)e.OriginalSource;
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// Should start at something like a TextBlock. Walk up the tree until we hit the
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// ListViewItem.
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while (dep != null && !(dep is ListViewItem)) {
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dep = VisualTreeHelper.GetParent(dep);
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}
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if (dep == null) {
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return null;
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}
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return (ListViewItem)dep;
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}
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/// <summary>
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/// Determines which column was the target of a mouse click. Only works for ListView
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/// with GridView.
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/// </summary>
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/// <remarks>
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/// There's just no other way to do this with ListView. With DataGrid you can do this
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/// somewhat reasonably (see below), but ListView just doesn't want to help.
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/// </remarks>
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/// <returns>Column index, or -1 if the click was outside the columns (e.g. off the right
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/// edge).</returns>
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public static int GetClickEventColumn(this ListView lv, MouseButtonEventArgs e) {
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// There's a bit of padding that seems to offset things. Not sure how to account
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// for it, so for now just fudge it.
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const int FUDGE = 4;
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Point p = e.GetPosition(lv);
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GridView gv = (GridView)lv.View;
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double startPos = FUDGE;
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for (int index = 0; index < gv.Columns.Count; index++) {
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GridViewColumn col = gv.Columns[index];
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if (p.X < startPos + col.ActualWidth) {
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return index;
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}
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startPos += col.ActualWidth;
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}
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return -1;
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}
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}
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/// <summary>
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/// Helper functions for working with DataGrids.
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/// </summary>
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/// <remarks>
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/// It's tempting to handle double-click actions by using the selected row. This gets a
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/// little weird, though, because double-clicking on a header or blank area doesn't
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/// clear the selection.
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/// </remarks>
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public static class DataGridExtensions {
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/// <summary>
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/// Determines which row and column was the target of a mouse button action.
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/// </summary>
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/// <remarks>
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/// Based on https://blog.scottlogic.com/2008/12/02/wpf-datagrid-detecting-clicked-cell-and-row.html
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/// </remarks>
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/// <returns>True if the click was on a data item.</returns>
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public static bool GetClickRowColItem(this DataGrid dg, MouseButtonEventArgs e,
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out int rowIndex, out int colIndex, out object item) {
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rowIndex = colIndex = -1;
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item = null;
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DependencyObject dep = (DependencyObject)e.OriginalSource;
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// The initial dep will likely be a TextBlock. Walk up the tree until we find
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// an object for the cell. If we don't find one, this might be a click in the
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// header or off the bottom of the list.
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while (!(dep is DataGridCell)) {
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dep = VisualTreeHelper.GetParent(dep);
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if (dep == null) {
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return false;
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}
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}
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DataGridCell cell = (DataGridCell)dep;
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// Now search up for the DataGridRow object.
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do {
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dep = VisualTreeHelper.GetParent(dep);
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if (dep == null) {
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Debug.Assert(false, "Found cell but not row?");
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return false;
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}
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} while (!(dep is DataGridRow));
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DataGridRow row = (DataGridRow)dep;
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// Get a row index for the entry.
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DataGrid rowGrid = (DataGrid)ItemsControl.ItemsControlFromItemContainer(row);
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rowIndex = rowGrid.ItemContainerGenerator.IndexFromContainer(row);
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// Column index is, weirdly enough, just sitting in a property.
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colIndex = cell.Column.DisplayIndex;
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// Item is part of the row.
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item = row.Item;
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return true;
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}
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#if false
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public static DataGridRow GetRow(this DataGrid grid, int index) {
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DataGridRow row = (DataGridRow)grid.ItemContainerGenerator.ContainerFromIndex(index);
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if (row == null) {
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// May be virtualized, bring into view and try again.
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grid.UpdateLayout();
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grid.ScrollIntoView(grid.Items[index]);
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row = (DataGridRow)grid.ItemContainerGenerator.ContainerFromIndex(index);
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}
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return row;
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}
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#endif
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}
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/// <summary>
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/// RichTextBox extensions.
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/// </summary>
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public static class RichTextBoxExtensions {
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/// <summary>
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/// Overloads RichTextBox.AppendText() with a version that takes a color as an argument.
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/// NOTE: color is "sticky", and will affect the next call to the built-in AppendText()
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/// method.
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/// </summary>
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/// <remarks>
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/// Adapted from https://stackoverflow.com/a/23402165/294248
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///
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/// TODO(someday): figure out how to reset the color for future calls.
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/// </remarks>
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public static void AppendText(this RichTextBox box, string text, Color color) {
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TextRange tr = new TextRange(box.Document.ContentEnd, box.Document.ContentEnd);
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tr.Text = text;
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try {
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tr.ApplyPropertyValue(TextElement.ForegroundProperty,
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new SolidColorBrush(color));
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} catch (FormatException ex) {
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Debug.WriteLine("RTB AppendText extension failed: " + ex);
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}
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}
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}
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}
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