Question

How can I implement the following in my piece of code written in WPF C#?

I have a ElementFlow control in which I have implemented a SelectionChanged event which (by definition) fires up a specific event when the control's item selection has changed.

What I would like it to do is:

  1. Start a timer
  2. If the timer reaches 2 seconds then launch a MessageBox saying ("Hi there") for example
  3. If the selection changes before the timer reaches 2 seconds then the timer should be reset and started over again.

This is to ensure that the lengthy action only launches if the selection has not changed within 2 seconds but I am not familiar with the DispatcherTimer feature of WPF as i am more in the know when it comes to the normal Timer of Windows Forms.

Thanks,

S.

Was it helpful?

Solution 2

I've figured the complete code out as such:

DispatcherTimer _timer;

public MainWindow()
{
    _myTimer = new DispatcherTimer();
    _myTimer.Tick += MyTimerTick;
    _myTimer.Interval = new TimeSpan(0,0,0,1);
}

private void ElementFlowSelectionChanged(object sender, SelectionChangedEventArgs e)
{
    _counter = 0;
    _myTimer.Stop();
    _myTimer.Interval = new TimeSpan(0, 0, 0, 1);
    _myTimer.Start();
}

private int _counter;
public int Counter
{
    get { return _counter; }
    set
        {
            _counter = value;
            OnPropertyChanged("Counter");
        }
}
private void MyTimerTick(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
    Counter++;
    if (Counter == 2)
    {
        _myTimer.Stop();
        MessageBox.Show(“Reached the 2 second countdown”);
    }
}
public event PropertyChangedEventHandler PropertyChanged;
protected virtual void OnPropertyChanged(string propertyName)
{
    PropertyChangedEventHandler e = PropertyChanged;
    if (e != null)
        {
            e(this, new PropertyChangedEventArgs(propertyName));
}
}

OTHER TIPS

Try this:

private int timerTickCount = 0;
private bool hasSelectionChanged = false;
private DispatcherTimer timer;

In your constructor or relevant method:

timer = new DispatcherTimer();
timer.Interval = new TimeSpan(0, 0, 1); // will 'tick' once every second
timer.Tick += new EventHandler(Timer_Tick);
timer.Start();

And then an event handler:

private void Timer_Tick(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
    DispatcherTimer timer = (DispatcherTimer)sender;
    if (++timerTickCount == 2)
    {
        if (hasSelectionChanged) timer.Stop();
        else MessageBox.Show("Hi there");
    }
}

Finally, to make this work, you just need to set the hasSelectionChanged variable when the selection has changed according to your SelectionChanged event.

look here is the code of how to use DispatherTimer and you can add your own logic in it. that will depends on you..

 private void ListBox_SelectionChanged_1(object sender, SelectionChangedEventArgs e)
    {
        DispatcherTimer timer = new DispatcherTimer();
        timer.Interval = TimeSpan.FromMilliseconds(2000);
        timer.Tick += timer_Tick;
        timer.Start();

    }

    void  timer_Tick(object sender, object e)
    {
       // show your message here..
    }

To use a DispatcherTimer:

    private DispatcherTimer _timer;
    public void StartTimer()
    {
        if (_timer == null)
        {
            _timer = new DispatcherTimer();
            _timer.Tick += _timer_Tick;
        }

        _timer.Interval = TimeSpan.FromSeconds(2);
        _timer.Start();
    }

    void _timer_Tick(object sender, EventArgs e)
    {
        MessageBox.Show("Hi there");
        _timer.Stop();
    }

    void SelectionChangedEvent()
    {
        StartTimer();
    }
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