I am using Visual State Adaptive Trigger to change page appearance depending on effective screen resolution. This works great, but I cannot get it to work for ListView Items
We can't use AdaptiveTrigger
for an element inside the DataTemplate
. You should use UserControl to do it. This answer may help you. If you want a video tutorial then this video may help you. But I have a little workaround for it.
Here is my method:
Create a TextBlock
outside the DataTemplate
and set Visibility="Collapsed"
<TextBlock Name="SetFontSize" Visibility="Collapsed"/>
Note: You could also use BindableValueHolder instead of this and set the Value property of it using AdaptiveTrigger
.
<helpers:BindableValueHolder x:Name="SetFontSize"/>
Use AdaptiveTrigger
to change the FontSize
of this TextBlock
<VisualStateManager.VisualStateGroups>
<VisualStateGroup>
<VisualState x:Name="NormalStateReadView">
<VisualState.StateTriggers>
<AdaptiveTrigger MinWindowWidth="0" />
</VisualState.StateTriggers>
<VisualState.Setters>
<Setter Target="SetFontSize.FontSize" Value="20" />
</VisualState.Setters>
</VisualState>
</VisualStateGroup>
<VisualStateGroup>
<VisualState x:Name="WideStateReadView">
<VisualState.StateTriggers>
<AdaptiveTrigger MinWindowWidth="720" />
</VisualState.StateTriggers>
<VisualState.Setters>
<Setter Target="SetFontSize.FontSize" Value="30" />
</VisualState.Setters>
</VisualState>
</VisualStateGroup>
</VisualStateManager.VisualStateGroups>
DataBind the FontSize
of the TextBlock
inside the DataTemplate
to the outer TextBlock
<TextBlock FontSize="{Binding Path=FontSize, ElementName=SetFontSize}"/>
Here is your code:
<VisualStateManager.VisualStateGroups>
<VisualStateGroup>
<VisualState x:Name="NormalStateReadView">
<!-- VisualState to be triggered when window width is <720 effective pixels -->
<VisualState.StateTriggers>
<AdaptiveTrigger MinWindowWidth="0" />
</VisualState.StateTriggers>
<VisualState.Setters>
<Setter Target="SetFontSize.FontSize" Value="20" />
</VisualState.Setters>
</VisualState>
</VisualStateGroup>
<VisualStateGroup>
<VisualState x:Name="WideStateReadView">
<!-- VisualState to be triggered when window width is >=720 effective pixels -->
<VisualState.StateTriggers>
<AdaptiveTrigger MinWindowWidth="720" />
</VisualState.StateTriggers>
<VisualState.Setters>
<Setter Target="SetFontSize.FontSize" Value="30" />
</VisualState.Setters>
</VisualState>
</VisualStateGroup>
</VisualStateManager.VisualStateGroups>
<TextBlock Name="SetFontSize" Visibility="Collapsed"/>
<ListView x:Name="listView">
<ListView.ItemTemplate>
<DataTemplate>
<TextBlock FontSize="{Binding Path=FontSize, ElementName=SetFontSize}" Text="{Binding MyItem}"/>
</DataTemplate>
</ListView.ItemTemplate>
</ListView>
You will need to wrap your your template inside a UserControl
for adaptive triggers to work; also the visual states should go inside the template as well, and make sure it's under the first direct child (i.e. Grid
) of the UserControl
. I see you have defined two visual state groups but really you just need one.
<ListView.ItemTemplate>
<DataTemplate>
<UserControl>
<Grid>
<VisualStateManager.VisualStateGroups>
<VisualStateGroup>
<VisualState x:Name="NarrowState">
<VisualState.StateTriggers>
<AdaptiveTrigger MinWindowWidth="0" />
</VisualState.StateTriggers>
<VisualState.Setters>
<Setter Target="Title.(TextBlock.FontSize)" Value="24" />
</VisualState.Setters>
</VisualState>
<VisualState x:Name="WideState">
<VisualState.StateTriggers>
<AdaptiveTrigger MinWindowWidth="720" />
</VisualState.StateTriggers>
<VisualState.Setters>
<Setter Target="Title.(TextBlock.FontSize)" Value="36" />
</VisualState.Setters>
</VisualState>
</VisualStateGroup>
</VisualStateManager.VisualStateGroups>
<TextBlock x:Name="Title" Text="{Binding Property1}" />
</Grid>
</UserControl>
</DataTemplate>
</ListView.ItemTemplate>
Here is what I think a much more flexible solution. It needs some code to setup but the outcome is that you get clean, reusable and readable code.
The idea is to obtain a reference of the top level VisualStateGroup
which is defined outside of the ListView
, mostly at the Page
level.
Then, create three VisualState
s (i.e. Narrow, Normal & Wide) and attach them to a new VisualStateGroup
which should belong to the first child of the UserControl
.
Once we have referenced these two VisualStateGroup
s, we can monitor the top level one's CurrentStateChanged
and update the state in the second one accordingly.
All the logic above can be wrapped by a Behavior
from the UWP XAML Behavior nuget package.
Once the Behavior in place, you can define your inner states as easy as -
<DataTemplate>
<UserControl>
<Interactivity:Interaction.Behaviors>
<local:VisualStateInTemplateBehavior ParentVisualStateGroup="{Binding ElementName=AdaptiveVisualStates}">
<local:VisualStateInTemplateBehavior.NarrowState>
<VisualState x:Name="Narrow">
<VisualState.Setters>
<Setter Target="Title.(TextBlock.FontSize)" Value="24" />
</VisualState.Setters>
</VisualState>
</local:VisualStateInTemplateBehavior.NarrowState>
<local:VisualStateInTemplateBehavior.NormalState>
<VisualState x:Name="Normal">
<VisualState.Setters>
<Setter Target="Title.(TextBlock.FontSize)" Value="32" />
</VisualState.Setters>
</VisualState>
</local:VisualStateInTemplateBehavior.NormalState>
<local:VisualStateInTemplateBehavior.WideState>
<VisualState x:Name="Wide">
<VisualState.Setters>
<Setter Target="Title.(TextBlock.FontSize)" Value="40" />
</VisualState.Setters>
</VisualState>
</local:VisualStateInTemplateBehavior.WideState>
</local:VisualStateInTemplateBehavior>
</Interactivity:Interaction.Behaviors>
Feel free to check out a working sample here.