Table of Contents

Class TextBox

Namespace
GHIElectronics.Endpoint.UI.Controls
Assembly
GHIElectronics.Endpoint.UI.dll
public class TextBox : Control
Inheritance
TextBox
Inherited Members

Constructors

TextBox()

public TextBox()

Properties

BorderColor

public Color BorderColor { get; set; }

Property Value

Color

BorderThickness

public ushort BorderThickness { get; set; }

Property Value

ushort

PaddingX

public ushort PaddingX { get; set; }

Property Value

ushort

PaddingY

public ushort PaddingY { get; set; }

Property Value

ushort

PasswordChar

public char PasswordChar { get; set; }

Property Value

char

Text

public string Text { get; set; }

Property Value

string

TextAlign

public TextAlignment TextAlign { get; set; }

Property Value

TextAlignment

Methods

ArrangeOverride(int, int)

ArrangeOverride allows for the customization of the final sizing and positioning of children.

protected override void ArrangeOverride(int arrangeWidth, int arrangeHeight)

Parameters

arrangeWidth int

Final width

arrangeHeight int

Final height

Remarks

UIElement authors should override this method, call Arrange on each visible child UIElement, to size and position each child UIElement by passing a rectangle reserved for the child within parent space. Note: It is required that a parent UIElement calls Arrange on each child or they won't be rendered. Typical override follows a pattern roughly like this (pseudo-code):

protected override void ArrangeOverride(int arrangeWidth, int arrangeHeight)
{

         foreach (UIElement child in VisualChildren)
         {
             child.Arrange(new Rect(childX, childY, childWidth, childHeight);
         }
     }</code></pre></example>

MeasureOverride(int, int, out int, out int)

Measurement override. Implement your size-to-content logic here.

protected override void MeasureOverride(int availableWidth, int availableHeight, out int desiredWidth, out int desiredHeight)

Parameters

availableWidth int

Available size that parent can give to the child. May be MaxValue(when parent wants to measure to content). This is soft constraint. Child can return bigger size to indicate that it wants bigger space and hope that parent can throw in scrolling...

availableHeight int
desiredWidth int
desiredHeight int

Remarks

MeasureOverride is designed to be the main customizability point for size control of layout. UIElement authors should override this method, call Measure on each child UIElement, and compute their desired size based upon the measurement of the children. The return value should be the desired size.

Note: It is required that a parent UIElement calls Measure on each child or they won't be sized/arranged. Typical override follows a pattern roughly like this (pseudo-code):
protected override void MeasureOverride(int avialableWidth, int availableHeight, out int desiredWidth, out int desiredHeight)
{
foreach (UIElement child in VisualChildren)
{
child.Measure(availableSize);
availableSize.Deflate(child.DesiredSize);
_cache.StoreInfoAboutChild(child);
}
         Size desired = CalculateBasedOnCache(_cache);
         return desired;
     }</code></pre></example>

The key aspects of this snippet are:

  • You must call Measure on each child UIElement
  • It is common to cache measurement information between the MeasureOverride and ArrangeOverride method calls
  • Calling base.MeasureOverride is not required.
  • Calls to Measure on children are passing either the same availableSize as the parent, or a subset of the area depending on the type of layout the parent will perform (for example, it would be valid to remove the area for some border or padding).

OnRender(DrawingContext)

public override void OnRender(DrawingContext dc)

Parameters

dc DrawingContext

OnTouchUp(TouchEventArgs)

protected override void OnTouchUp(TouchEventArgs e)

Parameters

e TouchEventArgs

Events

TextChanged

public event TextChangedEventHandler TextChanged

Event Type

TextChangedEventHandler