Shrink Panel in Silverlight Storyboard
I would like to have an item's width shrink on a click of a button.
Right now I have two objects basically, when you click the button on objectA, a storyboard starts that rotates it around the x-axis and collapses it. Then it shows objectB by setting it's visibility to visible and rotates it around into view.
All I want to add is setting the width smaller while the storyboard is happening to objectA and objectB and then setting it back to normal at the end of the storyboard.
I tried setting the Thickness but I got a compile-time error complaining that it was readonly.
<ObjectAnimationUsingKeyFrames
BeginTime="00:00:00"
Storyboard.TargetName="objectA"
Storyboard.TargetProperty="(UIElement.Margin)">
<DiscreteObjectKeyFrame KeyTime="00:00:00">
<DiscreteObjectKeyFrame.Value>
<Thickness Left="10" Right="10"/>
</DiscreteObjectKeyFrame.Value>
</DiscreteObjectKeyFrame>
</ObjectAnimationUsingKeyFrames>
I have a simple layout for now...
Here is my UI XAML:
<StackPanel>
<Border x:Name="objectA" BorderBrush="Blue" BorderThickness="1" Height="100" Width="100">
<StackPanel>
<TextBox Margin="10"></TextBox>
<Button Width="50" x:Name="btn1" Content="Flip" Click="btn1_Click"/>
</StackPanel>
<Border.Projection>
<PlaneProjection RotationX="0"></PlaneProjection>
</Border.Projection>
</Border>
<Border Visibility="Collapsed" x:Name="objectB" BorderBrush="Red" BorderThickness="1" Height="100" Width="100">
<StackPanel>
<TextBox Margin="10"></TextBox>
<Button Width="50" x:Name="btn2" Content="Flip" Click="btn2_Click"/>
</StackPanel>
<Border.Projection>
<PlaneProjection RotationX="90"></PlaneProjection>
</Border.Projection>
</Border>
Here is the storyboard...
<Storyboard x:Name="Storyboardtest">
<DoubleAnimation BeginTime="00:00:00"
Storyboard.TargetName="objectA"
Storyboard.TargetProperty="(UIElement.Projection).(RotationX)"
From="0" To="-90">
开发者_运维问答 </DoubleAnimation>
<ObjectAnimationUsingKeyFrames
BeginTime="00:00:01"
Storyboard.TargetName="objectA"
Storyboard.TargetProperty="(UIElement.Visibility)">
<DiscreteObjectKeyFrame KeyTime="00:00:00">
<DiscreteObjectKeyFrame.Value>
<Visibility>Collapsed</Visibility>
</DiscreteObjectKeyFrame.Value>
</DiscreteObjectKeyFrame>
</ObjectAnimationUsingKeyFrames>
<ObjectAnimationUsingKeyFrames
BeginTime="00:00:01"
Storyboard.TargetName="objectB"
Storyboard.TargetProperty="(UIElement.Visibility)">
<DiscreteObjectKeyFrame KeyTime="00:00:00">
<DiscreteObjectKeyFrame.Value>
<Visibility>Visible</Visibility>
</DiscreteObjectKeyFrame.Value>
</DiscreteObjectKeyFrame>
</ObjectAnimationUsingKeyFrames>
<DoubleAnimation BeginTime="00:00:01"
Storyboard.TargetName="objectB"
Storyboard.TargetProperty="(UIElement.Projection).(RotationX)"
From="90" To="0">
</DoubleAnimation>
</Storyboard>
If it is just the visual width you want to affect, add the following to your storyboard. It will give the appearance of the controls moving into the distance and back as it flips:
<DoubleAnimationUsingKeyFrames Storyboard.TargetProperty="(UIElement.RenderTransform).(CompositeTransform.ScaleX)" Storyboard.TargetName="objectA">
<EasingDoubleKeyFrame KeyTime="0" Value="1"/>
<EasingDoubleKeyFrame KeyTime="0:0:1" Value="0.5"/>
</DoubleAnimationUsingKeyFrames>
<DoubleAnimationUsingKeyFrames Storyboard.TargetProperty="(UIElement.RenderTransform).(CompositeTransform.ScaleX)" Storyboard.TargetName="objectB">
<EasingDoubleKeyFrame KeyTime="0" Value="1"/>
<EasingDoubleKeyFrame KeyTime="0:0:1" Value="0.5"/>
<EasingDoubleKeyFrame KeyTime="0:0:2" Value="1"/>
</DoubleAnimationUsingKeyFrames>
you will also need to add the following as I used Expression blend to add the animation and it adds any required elements automatically:
<Border x:Name="objectA" BorderBrush="Blue" BorderThickness="1" Height="100" Width="100" RenderTransformOrigin="0.5,0.5">
<Border.RenderTransform>
<CompositeTransform/>
</Border.RenderTransform>
[Snip]
<Border Visibility="Collapsed" x:Name="objectB" BorderBrush="Red" BorderThickness="1" Height="100" Width="100" RenderTransformOrigin="0.5,0.5">
<Border.RenderTransform>
<CompositeTransform/>
</Border.RenderTransform>
The problem is that both the Width and Margin properties are not DependencyProperties so they can not be animated. On workaround method to accomplish this involves adding some custom DependencyProperties to your user control code-behind which can be hooked up to the storyboard and can in turn manipulate the actual properties of the objects.
For example you could add this DependencyProperty to your UserControl which basically allow the setting of the Width property of object A:
public static readonly DependencyProperty ObjectWidthProperty = DependencyProperty.Register(
"ObjectWidth",
typeof(double),
typeof(MainPage),
new PropertyMetadata(50.0, new PropertyChangedCallback(OnObjectWidthChanged)));
public double ObjectWidth
{
get { return (double)GetValue(ObjectWidthProperty); }
set { SetValue(ObjectWidthProperty, value); }
}
private static void OnObjectWidthChanged(DependencyObject d, DependencyPropertyChangedEventArgs e)
{
((MainPage)d).OnObjectWidthChanged(e);
}
private void OnObjectWidthChanged(DependencyPropertyChangedEventArgs e)
{
this.objectA.Width = this.ObjectWidth;
}
You could then add the following to your storyboard which would animate the width of objectA from 50 pixels down to 0:
<DoubleAnimation BeginTime="00:00:00"
Storyboard.TargetName="MyControl"
Storyboard.TargetProperty="ObjectWidth"
From="50" To="0"/>
The would also require you to add x:Name="MyControl" to your top-level UserControl. It's a little bit hacky, but it works to animate some of the underlying properties of elements that don't happen to be DependencyPropertys.
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