zoukankan      html  css  js  c++  java
  • WP8_检测列表是否滑动

    One of the UI features of lists on Windows Phone 7 is that the "scroll bars" don't really act like traditional scroll bars; they are non-interactive and they only appear when the list is actually scrolling. To achieve this, the Silverlight team added a new visual state group that is used in the default control template for showing / hiding the scroll bars.

    You can get programmatic access to the scroll state with the following approach. First, paste this XAML into the ContentGrid of a new WP7 application:

    <ListBox FontSize="50" x:Name="theList">
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 00"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 01"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 02"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 03"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 04"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 05"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 06"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 07"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 08"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 09"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 10"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 11"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 12"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 13"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 14"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 15"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 16"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 17"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 18"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 19"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 20"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 21"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 22"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 23"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 24"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 25"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 26"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 27"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 28"/>
      <ListBoxItem Content="Item 29"/>
    </ListBox>

    Now add the following to the code-behind file:

    public MainPage()
    {
      InitializeComponent();
      Loaded += new RoutedEventHandler(MainPage_Loaded);
    }

    bool alreadyHookedScrollEvents = false;

    void MainPage_Loaded(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
    {
      if (alreadyHookedScrollEvents)
        return;

      alreadyHookedScrollEvents = true;
      ScrollViewer viewer = FindSimpleVisualChild<ScrollViewer>(theList);
      if (viewer != null)
      {
        // Visual States are always on the first child of the control template
        FrameworkElement element = VisualTreeHelper.GetChild(viewer, 0) as FrameworkElement;
        if (element != null)
        {
          VisualStateGroup group = FindVisualState(element, "ScrollStates");
          if (group != null)
          {
            group.CurrentStateChanging += (s, args) => PageTitle.Text = args.NewState.Name;
          }
        }
      }
    }

    VisualStateGroup FindVisualState(FrameworkElement element, string name)
    {
      if (element == null)
        return null;

      IList groups = VisualStateManager.GetVisualStateGroups(element);
      foreach (VisualStateGroup group in groups)
        if (group.Name == name)
          return group;

      return null;
    }

    T FindSimpleVisualChild<T>(DependencyObject element) where T : class
    {
      while (element != null)
      {

        if (element is T)
          return element as T;

        element = VisualTreeHelper.GetChild(element, 0);
      }

      return null;
    }

    What this does is attach to the CurrentStateChanging event of the VisualStateGroup, which will be raised every time the scroll state changes from "Scrolling" to "NotScrolling" or vice-versa. There's a bunch of infrastructure code to walk the visual tree and pull out a state group, but the core code is very simple:

    1. First we attach a handler called MainPage_Loaded to the Page.Loaded event
    2. When the page loads, we call FindSimpleVisualChild to get the ScrollViewerchild of the list (this is a pretty dumb function)
      1. We make sure to only do this once, because the page could get loaded more than once if it is navigated
    3. Then we call FindVisualState to get the named visual state from the first child of the ScrollViewer
    4. Then we add a handler to the CurrentStateChanging event

    原文作者:Peter Torr - MSFT

    原文链接: http://blogs.msdn.com/b/ptorr/archive/2010/07/23/how-to-detect-when-a-list-is-scrolling-or-not.aspx

  • 相关阅读:
    solr和mongodb比较
    IKAnalyzer原理分析
    maven项目java包名的路径问题
    solr的EmbeddedSolrServer原理深入探讨
    团队冲刺第二阶段06
    构建之法读书笔记06——敏捷流程
    团队冲刺第二阶段05
    团队冲刺第二阶段04
    团队冲刺第二阶段03
    团队冲刺第二阶段02
  • 原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/jx270/p/3955140.html
Copyright © 2011-2022 走看看