Question

Hey. Another WPF question. In my XAML code I have a border:

<Border x:Name="myBorder" Background="AliceBlue" 
    Width="200" Height="200" 
    BorderThickness="10" BorderBrush="Black">
</Border>

and somewhere in code I increase the BorderThickness

double thickness = myBorder.BorderThickness.Bottom + 2;
myBorder.BorderThickness = new Thickness(thickness);

and the result is that the border's weight increases but not outside the 200x200 width-height, but inner, decreasing the dimension. Is there a way to do the opposite?

Was it helpful?

Solution

Well, actually you should set the width and height on the inner or outer control of the border, not on the border itself. Then you can set a negative margin for the border, equal to minus the value of the border thickness. Something like this should to the trick:

<Border x:Name="myBorder" Background="AliceBlue" 
Margin="-10,-10,-10,-10" BorderThickness="10" BorderBrush="Black">
    <Button Background="Red" Content="Test" Width="200" Height="200"></Button>
</Border>

OTHER TIPS

It looks like you need to increase Width and Height accordingly.

Licensed under: CC-BY-SA with attribution
Not affiliated with StackOverflow
scroll top