I've got some custom controls which are dynamically added to a custom grid. These controls can span over several columns and rows(which are all the same size). I'd like to drag and drop between the rows and columns. I can drag the individual controls, but they can move anywhere without limit. Even off the grid. I'd like to do it so it can only be dragged inside the grid AND snaps to the column/row it's dragged to.
Is there any easy-ish way to do this?
Honestly, if I could get the current row/column that it's over, then all I'd need to do is set the column/row of it to them and that would probably do it and then just worry about keeping it inside the grid.
The Grid class in WPF represents a Grid control. The following code snippet creates a Grid control, sets its width, horizontal alignment, vertical alignment, show grid lines, and background color. Grid DynamicGrid = new Grid();
A Grid is a control for laying out other controls on the form (or page). A DataGrid is a control for displaying tabular data as read from a database for example.
WPF GridSplitter control is a divider that helps to split the available space into rows and columns in a grid. It supports to splits the controls horizontally or vertically with a splitter. In addition to that, it allows users to resize the grid's column width and row height on demand.
I figured out a nice and fun way!
I worked out the position on the grid that the the mouse is on on the MouseUp event and then the relative position of the mouse on the control since it spans several rows/columns.
public void getPosition(UIElement element, out int col, out int row)
{
DControl control = parent as DControl;
var point = Mouse.GetPosition(element);
row = 0;
col = 0;
double accumulatedHeight = 0.0;
double accumulatedWidth = 0.0;
// calc row mouse was over
foreach (var rowDefinition in control.RowDefinitions)
{
accumulatedHeight += rowDefinition.ActualHeight;
if (accumulatedHeight >= point.Y)
break;
row++;
}
// calc col mouse was over
foreach (var columnDefinition in control.ColumnDefinitions)
{
accumulatedWidth += columnDefinition.ActualWidth;
if (accumulatedWidth >= point.X)
break;
col++;
}
}
I then take away the relative positions from the normal positions so that when you drop it, it always drops on the top left of the screen. When I move my controls, I use margins to move it, which screws up the position on the grid at the time, as shown below:
void Chart_PreviewMouseMove(object sender, MouseEventArgs e)
{
if (IsMouseCaptured)
{
Point mouseDelta = Mouse.GetPosition(this);
mouseDelta.Offset(-mouseOffset.X, -mouseOffset.Y);
Margin = new Thickness(
Margin.Left + mouseDelta.X,
Margin.Top + mouseDelta.Y,
Margin.Right - mouseDelta.X,
Margin.Bottom - mouseDelta.Y);
}
}
void Chart_PreviewMouseLeftButtonDown(object sender, MouseButtonEventArgs e)
{
mouseOffset = Mouse.GetPosition(this);
CaptureMouse();
parent.currentObject = this;
}
To tackle this, I simply reset the margin.
public void updatePosition()
{
Grid.SetRow(this, (int)position.Y);
Grid.SetColumn(this, (int)position.X);
Margin = new Thickness();
}
I hope this helps someone else since it was rather frustrating for me to find the answer and in the end I managed to get lots of little fragments of how to do things and eventually came up with my own solution.
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