ObservableCollection not noticing when Item in it changes (even with INotifyPropertyChanged)
Does anyone know why this code doesn't work:
public class CollectionViewModel : ViewModelBase {
public ObservableCollection<EntityViewModel> ContentList
{
get { return _contentList; }
set
{
_contentList = value;
RaisePropertyChanged("ContentList");
//I want to be notified here when something changes..?
//debugger doesn't stop here when IsRowChecked is toggled
}
}
}
public class EntityViewModel : ViewModelBase
{
private bool _isRowChecked;
public bool IsRowChecked
{
get { return _isRowChecked; }
set { _isRowChecked = value; RaisePropertyChanged("IsRowChecked"); }
}
}
ViewModelBase
containts everything for RaisePropertyChanged
etc. and it's working for everything else except this problem..
Here is a drop-in class that sub-classes ObservableCollection and actually raises a Reset action when a property on a list item changes. It enforces all items to implement INotifyPropertyChanged
.
The benefit here is that you can data bind to this class and all of your bindings will update with changes to your item properties.
public sealed class TrulyObservableCollection<T> : ObservableCollection<T>
where T : INotifyPropertyChanged
{
public TrulyObservableCollection()
{
CollectionChanged += FullObservableCollectionCollectionChanged;
}
public TrulyObservableCollection(IEnumerable<T> pItems) : this()
{
foreach (var item in pItems)
{
this.Add(item);
}
}
private void FullObservableCollectionCollectionChanged(object sender, NotifyCollectionChangedEventArgs e)
{
if (e.NewItems != null)
{
foreach (Object item in e.NewItems)
{
((INotifyPropertyChanged)item).PropertyChanged += ItemPropertyChanged;
}
}
if (e.OldItems != null)
{
foreach (Object item in e.OldItems)
{
((INotifyPropertyChanged)item).PropertyChanged -= ItemPropertyChanged;
}
}
}
private void ItemPropertyChanged(object sender, PropertyChangedEventArgs e)
{
NotifyCollectionChangedEventArgs args = new NotifyCollectionChangedEventArgs(NotifyCollectionChangedAction.Replace, sender, sender, IndexOf((T)sender));
OnCollectionChanged(args);
}
}
The ContentList's Set method will not get called when you change a value inside the collection, instead you should be looking out for the CollectionChanged event firing.
public class CollectionViewModel : ViewModelBase
{
public ObservableCollection<EntityViewModel> ContentList
{
get { return _contentList; }
}
public CollectionViewModel()
{
_contentList = new ObservableCollection<EntityViewModel>();
_contentList.CollectionChanged += ContentCollectionChanged;
}
public void ContentCollectionChanged(object sender, NotifyCollectionChangedEventArgs e)
{
//This will get called when the collection is changed
}
}
Okay, that's twice today I've been bitten by the MSDN documentation being wrong. In the link I gave you it says:
Occurs when an item is added, removed, changed, moved, or the entire list is refreshed.
But it actually doesn't fire when an item is changed. I guess you'll need a more bruteforce method then:
public class CollectionViewModel : ViewModelBase
{
public ObservableCollection<EntityViewModel> ContentList
{
get { return _contentList; }
}
public CollectionViewModel()
{
_contentList = new ObservableCollection<EntityViewModel>();
_contentList.CollectionChanged += ContentCollectionChanged;
}
public void ContentCollectionChanged(object sender, NotifyCollectionChangedEventArgs e)
{
if (e.Action == NotifyCollectionChangedAction.Remove)
{
foreach(EntityViewModel item in e.OldItems)
{
//Removed items
item.PropertyChanged -= EntityViewModelPropertyChanged;
}
}
else if (e.Action == NotifyCollectionChangedAction.Add)
{
foreach(EntityViewModel item in e.NewItems)
{
//Added items
item.PropertyChanged += EntityViewModelPropertyChanged;
}
}
}
public void EntityViewModelPropertyChanged(object sender, PropertyChangedEventArgs e)
{
//This will get called when the property of an object inside the collection changes
}
}
If you are going to need this a lot you may want to subclass your own ObservableCollection
that triggers the CollectionChanged
event when a member triggers its PropertyChanged
event automatically (like it says it should in the documentation...)
I've put together what I hope is a pretty robust solution, including some of the techniques in other answers. It is a new class derived from ObservableCollection<>
, which I'm calling FullyObservableCollection<>
It has the following features:
- It adds a new event,
ItemPropertyChanged
. I've deliberately kept this separate from the existingCollectionChanged
:- To aid backward compatibility.
- So more relevant detail can be given in the new
ItemPropertyChangedEventArgs
that accompanies it: the originalPropertyChangedEventArgs
and the index within the collection.
- It replicates all the constructors from
ObservableCollection<>
. - It correctly handles the list being reset (
ObservableCollection<>.Clear()
), avoiding a possible memory leak. - It overrides the base class's
OnCollectionChanged()
, rather than a more resource-intensive subscription to theCollectionChanged
event.
Code
The complete .cs
file follows. Note that a few features of C# 6 have been used, but it should be fairly simple to backport it:
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Collections.ObjectModel;
using System.Collections.Specialized;
using System.ComponentModel;
namespace Utilities
{
public class FullyObservableCollection<T> : ObservableCollection<T>
where T : INotifyPropertyChanged
{
/// <summary>
/// Occurs when a property is changed within an item.
/// </summary>
public event EventHandler<ItemPropertyChangedEventArgs> ItemPropertyChanged;
public FullyObservableCollection() : base()
{ }
public FullyObservableCollection(List<T> list) : base(list)
{
ObserveAll();
}
public FullyObservableCollection(IEnumerable<T> enumerable) : base(enumerable)
{
ObserveAll();
}
protected override void OnCollectionChanged(NotifyCollectionChangedEventArgs e)
{
if (e.Action == NotifyCollectionChangedAction.Remove ||
e.Action == NotifyCollectionChangedAction.Replace)
{
foreach (T item in e.OldItems)
item.PropertyChanged -= ChildPropertyChanged;
}
if (e.Action == NotifyCollectionChangedAction.Add ||
e.Action == NotifyCollectionChangedAction.Replace)
{
foreach (T item in e.NewItems)
item.PropertyChanged += ChildPropertyChanged;
}
base.OnCollectionChanged(e);
}
protected void OnItemPropertyChanged(ItemPropertyChangedEventArgs e)
{
ItemPropertyChanged?.Invoke(this, e);
}
protected void OnItemPropertyChanged(int index, PropertyChangedEventArgs e)
{
OnItemPropertyChanged(new ItemPropertyChangedEventArgs(index, e));
}
protected override void ClearItems()
{
foreach (T item in Items)
item.PropertyChanged -= ChildPropertyChanged;
base.ClearItems();
}
private void ObserveAll()
{
foreach (T item in Items)
item.PropertyChanged += ChildPropertyChanged;
}
private void ChildPropertyChanged(object sender, PropertyChangedEventArgs e)
{
T typedSender = (T)sender;
int i = Items.IndexOf(typedSender);
if (i < 0)
throw new ArgumentException("Received property notification from item not in collection");
OnItemPropertyChanged(i, e);
}
}
/// <summary>
/// Provides data for the <see cref="FullyObservableCollection{T}.ItemPropertyChanged"/> event.
/// </summary>
public class ItemPropertyChangedEventArgs : PropertyChangedEventArgs
{
/// <summary>
/// Gets the index in the collection for which the property change has occurred.
/// </summary>
/// <value>
/// Index in parent collection.
/// </value>
public int CollectionIndex { get; }
/// <summary>
/// Initializes a new instance of the <see cref="ItemPropertyChangedEventArgs"/> class.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="index">The index in the collection of changed item.</param>
/// <param name="name">The name of the property that changed.</param>
public ItemPropertyChangedEventArgs(int index, string name) : base(name)
{
CollectionIndex = index;
}
/// <summary>
/// Initializes a new instance of the <see cref="ItemPropertyChangedEventArgs"/> class.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="index">The index.</param>
/// <param name="args">The <see cref="PropertyChangedEventArgs"/> instance containing the event data.</param>
public ItemPropertyChangedEventArgs(int index, PropertyChangedEventArgs args) : this(index, args.PropertyName)
{ }
}
}
NUnit Tests
So you can check changes you might make (and see what I tested in the first place!), I've also included my NUnit test class. Obviously, the following code is not necessary just to use FullyObservableCollection<T>
in your project.
NB The test class uses BindableBase
from PRISM to implement INotifyPropertyChanged
. There is no dependency on PRISM from the main code.
using NUnit.Framework;
using Utilities;
using Microsoft.Practices.Prism.Mvvm;
using System.Collections.Specialized;
using System.Collections.Generic;
namespace Test_Utilities
{
[TestFixture]
public class Test_FullyObservableCollection : AssertionHelper
{
public class NotifyingTestClass : BindableBase
{
public int Id
{
get { return _Id; }
set { SetProperty(ref _Id, value); }
}
private int _Id;
public string Name
{
get { return _Name; }
set { SetProperty(ref _Name, value); }
}
private string _Name;
}
FullyObservableCollection<NotifyingTestClass> TestCollection;
NotifyingTestClass Fred;
NotifyingTestClass Betty;
List<NotifyCollectionChangedEventArgs> CollectionEventList;
List<ItemPropertyChangedEventArgs> ItemEventList;
[SetUp]
public void Init()
{
Fred = new NotifyingTestClass() { Id = 1, Name = "Fred" };
Betty = new NotifyingTestClass() { Id = 4, Name = "Betty" };
TestCollection = new FullyObservableCollection<NotifyingTestClass>()
{
Fred,
new NotifyingTestClass() {Id = 2, Name = "Barney" },
new NotifyingTestClass() {Id = 3, Name = "Wilma" }
};
CollectionEventList = new List<NotifyCollectionChangedEventArgs>();
ItemEventList = new List<ItemPropertyChangedEventArgs>();
TestCollection.CollectionChanged += (o, e) => CollectionEventList.Add(e);
TestCollection.ItemPropertyChanged += (o, e) => ItemEventList.Add(e);
}
// Change existing member property: just ItemPropertyChanged(IPC) should fire
[Test]
public void DetectMemberPropertyChange()
{
TestCollection[0].Id = 7;
Expect(CollectionEventList.Count, Is.EqualTo(0));
Expect(ItemEventList.Count, Is.EqualTo(1), "IPC count");
Expect(ItemEventList[0].PropertyName, Is.EqualTo(nameof(Fred.Id)), "Field Name");
Expect(ItemEventList[0].CollectionIndex, Is.EqualTo(0), "Collection Index");
}
// Add new member, change property: CollectionPropertyChanged (CPC) and IPC should fire
[Test]
public void DetectNewMemberPropertyChange()
{
TestCollection.Add(Betty);
Expect(TestCollection.Count, Is.EqualTo(4));
Expect(TestCollection[3].Name, Is.EqualTo("Betty"));
Expect(ItemEventList.Count, Is.EqualTo(0), "Item Event count");
Expect(CollectionEventList.Count, Is.EqualTo(1), "Collection Event count");
Expect(CollectionEventList[0].Action, Is.EqualTo(NotifyCollectionChangedAction.Add), "Action (add)");
Expect(CollectionEventList[0].OldItems, Is.Null, "OldItems count");
Expect(CollectionEventList[0].NewItems.Count, Is.EqualTo(1), "NewItems count");
Expect(CollectionEventList[0].NewItems[0], Is.EqualTo(Betty), "NewItems[0] dereference");
CollectionEventList.Clear(); // Empty for next operation
ItemEventList.Clear();
TestCollection[3].Id = 7;
Expect(CollectionEventList.Count, Is.EqualTo(0), "Collection Event count");
Expect(ItemEventList.Count, Is.EqualTo(1), "Item Event count");
Expect(TestCollection[ItemEventList[0].CollectionIndex], Is.EqualTo(Betty), "Collection Index dereference");
}
// Remove member, change property: CPC should fire for removel, neither CPC nor IPC should fire for change
[Test]
public void CeaseListentingWhenMemberRemoved()
{
TestCollection.Remove(Fred);
Expect(TestCollection.Count, Is.EqualTo(2));
Expect(TestCollection.IndexOf(Fred), Is.Negative);
Expect(ItemEventList.Count, Is.EqualTo(0), "Item Event count (pre change)");
Expect(CollectionEventList.Count, Is.EqualTo(1), "Collection Event count (pre change)");
Expect(CollectionEventList[0].Action, Is.EqualTo(NotifyCollectionChangedAction.Remove), "Action (remove)");
Expect(CollectionEventList[0].OldItems.Count, Is.EqualTo(1), "OldItems count");
Expect(CollectionEventList[0].NewItems, Is.Null, "NewItems count");
Expect(CollectionEventList[0].OldItems[0], Is.EqualTo(Fred), "OldItems[0] dereference");
CollectionEventList.Clear(); // Empty for next operation
ItemEventList.Clear();
Fred.Id = 7;
Expect(CollectionEventList.Count, Is.EqualTo(0), "Collection Event count (post change)");
Expect(ItemEventList.Count, Is.EqualTo(0), "Item Event count (post change)");
}
// Move member in list, change property: CPC should fire for move, IPC should fire for change
[Test]
public void MoveMember()
{
TestCollection.Move(0, 1);
Expect(TestCollection.Count, Is.EqualTo(3));
Expect(TestCollection.IndexOf(Fred), Is.GreaterThan(0));
Expect(ItemEventList.Count, Is.EqualTo(0), "Item Event count (pre change)");
Expect(CollectionEventList.Count, Is.EqualTo(1), "Collection Event count (pre change)");
Expect(CollectionEventList[0].Action, Is.EqualTo(NotifyCollectionChangedAction.Move), "Action (move)");
Expect(CollectionEventList[0].OldItems.Count, Is.EqualTo(1), "OldItems count");
Expect(CollectionEventList[0].NewItems.Count, Is.EqualTo(1), "NewItems count");
Expect(CollectionEventList[0].OldItems[0], Is.EqualTo(Fred), "OldItems[0] dereference");
Expect(CollectionEventList[0].NewItems[0], Is.EqualTo(Fred), "NewItems[0] dereference");
CollectionEventList.Clear(); // Empty for next operation
ItemEventList.Clear();
Fred.Id = 7;
Expect(CollectionEventList.Count, Is.EqualTo(0), "Collection Event count (post change)");
Expect(ItemEventList.Count, Is.EqualTo(1), "Item Event count (post change)");
Expect(TestCollection[ItemEventList[0].CollectionIndex], Is.EqualTo(Fred), "Collection Index dereference");
}
// Clear list, chnage property: only CPC should fire for clear and neither for property change
[Test]
public void ClearList()
{
TestCollection.Clear();
Expect(TestCollection.Count, Is.EqualTo(0));
Expect(ItemEventList.Count, Is.EqualTo(0), "Item Event count (pre change)");
Expect(CollectionEventList.Count, Is.EqualTo(1), "Collection Event count (pre change)");
Expect(CollectionEventList[0].Action, Is.EqualTo(NotifyCollectionChangedAction.Reset), "Action (reset)");
Expect(CollectionEventList[0].OldItems, Is.Null, "OldItems count");
Expect(CollectionEventList[0].NewItems, Is.Null, "NewItems count");
CollectionEventList.Clear(); // Empty for next operation
ItemEventList.Clear();
Fred.Id = 7;
Expect(CollectionEventList.Count, Is.EqualTo(0), "Collection Event count (post change)");
Expect(ItemEventList.Count, Is.EqualTo(0), "Item Event count (post change)");
}
}
}
This uses the above ideas but makes it a derived 'more sensitive' collection:
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using System.ComponentModel;
using System.Collections.ObjectModel;
using System.Collections.Specialized;
using System.Collections;
namespace somethingelse
{
public class ObservableCollectionEx<T> : ObservableCollection<T> where T : INotifyPropertyChanged
{
// this collection also reacts to changes in its components' properties
public ObservableCollectionEx() : base()
{
this.CollectionChanged +=new System.Collections.Specialized.NotifyCollectionChangedEventHandler(ObservableCollectionEx_CollectionChanged);
}
void ObservableCollectionEx_CollectionChanged(object sender, System.Collections.Specialized.NotifyCollectionChangedEventArgs e)
{
if (e.Action == NotifyCollectionChangedAction.Remove)
{
foreach(T item in e.OldItems)
{
//Removed items
item.PropertyChanged -= EntityViewModelPropertyChanged;
}
}
else if (e.Action == NotifyCollectionChangedAction.Add)
{
foreach(T item in e.NewItems)
{
//Added items
item.PropertyChanged += EntityViewModelPropertyChanged;
}
}
}
public void EntityViewModelPropertyChanged(object sender, PropertyChangedEventArgs e)
{
//This will get called when the property of an object inside the collection changes - note you must make it a 'reset' - I don't know, why
NotifyCollectionChangedEventArgs args = new NotifyCollectionChangedEventArgs(NotifyCollectionChangedAction.Reset);
OnCollectionChanged(args);
}
}
}
ObservableCollection will not propagate individual item changes as CollectionChanged events. You will either need to subscribe to each event and forward it manually, or you can check out the BindingList[T] class, which will do this for you.