I am able to use an ItemTemplate within an ItemsControl to render items in a specific format. However, if one of the items within the ItemsControl happens to be, say, a TextBox, that TextBox is rendered rather than an instance of the ItemsTemplate. From what I can tell, this is true for any FrameworkElement. Is this intended behavior for an ItemsControl, or am I doing something incorrectly?
An example:
<ItemsControl>
<ItemsControl.ItemTemplate>
<DataTemplate>
<Grid Margin="5">
<Rectangle Fill="Blue" Height="20" Width="20" />
</Grid>
</DataTemplate>
</ItemsControl.ItemTemplate>
<ItemsControl.Items>
<sys:Object />
<TextBox />
<sys:Object />
<Rectangle Fill="Red" Height="20" Width="20" />
</ItemsControl.Items>
</ItemsControl>
I expected this to display four blue rectangles. I thought that any time an ItemTemplate has been defined each item in the collection is rendered as an instance of the template. However, in this case the following is rendered: a blue rectangle followed by a TextBox followed by a blue rectangle followed by a red rectangle.
The ItemsControl
has a protected member IsItemItsOwnContainerOverride
which is passed an object from the items collection and returns true
if that object can be added directly to the items panel without a generated container (and thereby be templated).
The base implementation returns true for any object that derives from UIElement
.
To get the behaviour you would expect you would need to inherit from ItemsControl
and override this method and have it always return false. Unfortunately thats not the end of the matter. The default implementation of PrepareContainerForItemOverride
still doesn't assign the ItemTemplate
to the container if the item is a UIElement
so you need to override this method as well:-
protected override bool IsItemItsOwnContainerOverride(object item)
{
return false;
}
protected override void PrepareContainerForItemOverride(DependencyObject element, object item)
{
base.PrepareContainerForItemOverride(element, item);
((ContentPresenter)element).ContentTemplate = ItemTemplate;
}
I'm just speculating here, but I would bet that it's behavior that lives inside of the ItemContainerGenerator
. I'd bet that the ItemContainerGenerator
looks at an item, and if it's a UIElement
it says, "cool, the item container's been generated, I'll just return it" and if it's not, it says, "I'd better generate a container for this item. Where's the DataTemplate
?"
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