A simplified version of the accepted answer that does NOT require you to type names of properties manually in every property setter like OnPropertyChanged("some-property-name")
. Instead you just call OnPropertyChanged()
without parameters:
You need .NET 4.5 minimum.
CallerMemberName
is in the System.Runtime.CompilerServices
namespace
public class Sample : INotifyPropertyChanged
{
private string _propString;
private int _propInt;
//======================================
// Actual implementation
//======================================
public event PropertyChangedEventHandler PropertyChanged;
[NotifyPropertyChangedInvocator]
protected virtual void OnPropertyChanged([CallerMemberName] string propertyName = null)
{
var handler = PropertyChanged;
if (handler != null) handler(this, new PropertyChangedEventArgs(propertyName));
}
//======================================
// END: actual implementation
//======================================
public string PropString
{
get { return _propString; }
set
{
// do not trigger change event if values are the same
if (Equals(value, _propString)) return;
_propString = value;
//===================
// Usage in the Source
//===================
OnPropertyChanged();
}
}
public int PropInt
{
get { return _propInt; }
set
{
// do not allow negative numbers, but always trigger a change event
_propInt = value < 0 ? 0 : value;
OnPropertyChanged();
}
}
}
Usage stays the same:
var source = new Sample();
textbox.DataBindings.Add("Text", source, "PropString");
source.PropString = "Some new string";
Hope this helps someone.