I have a WPF user control that contains a DataGrid
. I'm binding an ObservableCollection
of view models to it. Each view model has another collection of view models that I'm us开发者_JAVA百科ing to bind another DataGrid
to. So the effect is a DataGrid
with a nested DataGrid
contained in the row details template.
Normally the binding is quite quick, but sometimes when there's a lot of data it can hang the UI while the binding/drawing is taking place.
Is there a way where I can either show a loading animation or progress bar while the binding/drawing is in progress?
There's probably a more formal, or at least simpler solution, but you could use a modal popup window that is shown in a worker thread and is closed asynchronously when your is grid done loading:
Window waitWindow = new Window { Height = 100, Width = 200, WindowStartupLocation = WindowStartupLocation.CenterScreen, WindowStyle = WindowStyle.None };
waitWindow.Content = new TextBlock { Text = "Please Wait", FontSize = 30, FontWeight = FontWeights.Bold, HorizontalAlignment = HorizontalAlignment.Center, VerticalAlignment = VerticalAlignment.Center };
BackgroundWorker worker = new BackgroundWorker();
worker.DoWork += delegate
{
Dispatcher.BeginInvoke(new Action(delegate { waitWindow.ShowDialog(); }));
DataLoader dataLoader = new DataLoader(); // I made this class up
dataLoader.DataLoaded += delegate
{
Dispatcher.BeginInvoke(new Action(delegate() { waitWindow.Close(); }));
};
dataLoader.LoadData();
};
worker.RunWorkerAsync();
You can replace the TextBlock with something pretty like a loading bar, and you could make the code re-usable by parameterizing the object that handles the loading of the grid(s) and passing it in to a commonly used method.
I hope that works for you.
I had the same problem and this is how I solved it.
I discovered that DataGrid will only start creating controls when it displays the grid. In my case this was the time consuming process. After some tracing I found that creating the controls happens during measuring !
My solution is to override MeasureOverride and put the wait cursor around the base class call. I encapsulated my wait cursor setting in a class. So the code looks like this.
protected override Size MeasureOverride(Size availableSize)
{
using (new DisposableWaitCursor(this))
{
return base.MeasureOverride(availableSize);
}
}
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