(I posted this initially on the Xamarin Forums, but then decided I might get a faster answer here?) TL;DR: Some layouts will count a tap on a transparent background, others won't. Setting InputTransparent on a container sets it for all of its children, and I feel like children should be able to override the parent. I need to create elements that overlay another element and pass taps through a transparent region but still have tappable buttons. When I try this with a Grid, it doesn't work. I don't want to go back to AbsoluteLayouts. I'm mostly working in iOS right now, I'm not quite sure if it's a problem in Android yet. Windows Phone/UWP isn't on the table.
Longer version:
I'm rewriting some layouts that worked OK in an older Xamarin Forms (1.3 I think). We recently upgraded to 2.1, and it wreaked havoc on the layout code's bad decisions. I'm tasked with updating the layouts to behave themselves. While I recognize 2.2 has been released, I just tried an upgrade and everything I'm typing seems true in that version as well, so it's not a 2.1 vs. 2.2 issue, or at least if some improvements are made they aren't helping me.
It's a mapping application, so the centerpiece of all layouts is an expensive, temperamental OpenGL element. This element very much does not like to be reparented, so I've adopted a layout sort of like this imaginary XAML:
<ContentPage>
<CustomLayout>
<OurHeaderControl />
<TheMapControl />
<OurFooterControl />
<MapOverlay />
</CustomLayout>
</ContentPage
The purpose of "MapOverlay" is to implement our workflows by adding Xamarin elements on top of the header/footer areas and/or the map. For example, one layout adds a list of directions to the bottom above the footer, so it has less room for the map to appear. The custom layout understands this and lays out the map after the overlay so it can ask for the correct map bounds.
In this layout, I cannot tap on anything the MapOverlay is over. I can make it InputTransparent and tap those things, but then all of its children are also not tappable. This was not true in the old layouts.
Here's the only differences I see between the old layouts and the new:
The old layouts were a complicated mess of AbsoluteLayouts. It looked something like this, I didn't write it:
<ContentPage>
<AbsoluteLayout> // "main layout"
<AbsoluteLayout> // "map layout"
<Map /> // An AbsoluteLayout containing the OpenGL view.
</AbsoluteLayout>
<AbsoluteLayout> // "child layout"
<SubPage /> // An AbsoluteLayout
</AbsoluteLayout>
</AbsoluteLayout>
</ContentPage>
The main layout contains AbsoluteLayouts to constrain the child views. One child view is itself an AbsoluteLayout that contains the Map and a handful of other elements associated with it. The other child is the overlay, which is always an AbsoluteLayout that contains the elements relevant to that overlay. These layouts all reference each other in cycles and update each other as layout events change. It's a fascinating ping-ponging that eventually settles down. Usually. Sometimes things just disapper. Obviously there's a reason I'm rewriting it.
But I can click on what I need to click on at every layer, and I don't get that.
So, let's talk about what I need to work, and maybe figure out if it's a bug why it's not working, or if it's a coincidence that it worked with other layouts. Here's a non-XAML page layout that demonstrates, my project's got its roots in the days when you couldn't use XAML in shared libraries:
I need to be able to tap both buttons in this UI and have them respond.
public class MyPage : ContentPage {
public MyPage() {
var mainLayout = new AbsoluteLayout();
// Two buttons will be overlaid.
var overlaidButton = new Button() {
Text = "Overlaid",
Command = new Command((o) => DisplayAlert("Upper!", "Overlaid button.", "Ah."))
};
mainLayout.Children.Add(overlaidButton, new Rectangle(0.25, 0.25, AbsoluteLayout.AutoSize, AbsoluteLayout.AutoSize), AbsoluteLayoutFlags.PositionProportional);
// The top overlay layout will be a grid.
var overlay = new Grid() {
RowDefinitions = { new RowDefinition() { Height = new GridLength(1.0, GridUnitType.Star) } },
ColumnDefinitions = {
new ColumnDefinition() { Width = new GridLength(1.0, GridUnitType.Star) },
new ColumnDefinition() { Width = new GridLength(1.0, GridUnitType.Star) },
},
BackgroundColor = Color.Transparent
};
var overlayingButton = new Button() {
Text = "Overlaying",
Command = new Command((o) => DisplayAlert("Upper!", "Overlaying button.", "Ah."))
};
overlay.Children.Add(overlayingButton, 0, 1);
mainLayout.Children.Add(overlay, new Rectangle(0, 0, 1.0, 1.0), AbsoluteLayoutFlags.All);
// This pair of property sets makes the overlaid button clickable, but not the overlaying!
// overlay.InputTransparent = true;
// upperOverlayButton.InputTransparent = false;
Content = mainLayout;
}
}
This only lets me tap the "overlaying" button even when I change the Grid to an AbsoluteLayout.
I'm stumped. It took me 2 weeks to debug the initial layouts and come up with a new solution. I really don't want to disassemble all of our layouts and put everything in one big AbsoluteLayout or a custom layout. In WPF, there were two kinds of transparent: "transparent background" meant the background could still hit test, and "null background" meant the background would not hit test. Is there some way to overlay layouts in Xamarin like this?
Or, more appropriate, why is the convoluted nest of numerous AbsoluteLayouts in our old layouts working like I need it to, but this much simpler layout isn't?
updates
Here's some additional information I remembered:
- This behavior is iOS specific. On Android, both the example code and our code work.
- I'm not the first person to have this problem: On StackOverflow. On Xamarin's Forums.