How can I make a WPF TreeView data binding lazy and asynchronous?

Posted by pauldoo on Stack Overflow See other posts from Stack Overflow or by pauldoo
Published on 2010-06-01T15:24:49Z Indexed on 2010/06/01 19:43 UTC
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I am learning how to use data binding in WPF for a TreeView. I am procedurally creating the Binding object, setting Source, Path, and Converter properties to point to my own classes. I can even go as far as setting IsAsync and I can see the GUI update asynchronously when I explore the tree. So far so good!

My problem is that WPF eagerly evaluates parts of the tree prior to them being expanded in the GUI. If left long enough this would result in the entire tree being evaluated (well actually in this example my tree is infinite, but you get the idea). I would like the tree only be evaluated on demand as the user expands the nodes. Is this possible using the existing asynchronous data binding stuff in the WPF?

As an aside I have not figured out how ObjectDataProvider relates to this task.


My XAML code contains only a single TreeView object, and my C# code is:

public partial class Window1 : Window
{
    public Window1() {
        InitializeComponent();

        treeView.Items.Add( CreateItem(2) );
    }

    static TreeViewItem CreateItem(int number)
    {
        TreeViewItem item = new TreeViewItem();
        item.Header = number;

        Binding b = new Binding();
        b.Converter = new MyConverter();
        b.Source = new MyDataProvider(number);
        b.Path = new PropertyPath("Value");
        b.IsAsync = true;
        item.SetBinding(TreeView.ItemsSourceProperty, b);

        return item;
    }

    class MyDataProvider
    {
        readonly int m_value;

        public MyDataProvider(int value) {
            m_value = value;
        }

        public int[] Value {
            get {
                // Sleep to mimick a costly operation that should not hang the UI
                System.Threading.Thread.Sleep(2000);
                System.Diagnostics.Debug.Write(string.Format("Evaluated for {0}\n", m_value));
                return new int[] {
                    m_value * 2, 
                    m_value + 1,
                };
            }
        }
    }

    class MyConverter : IValueConverter
    {
        public object Convert(object value, Type targetType, object parameter, System.Globalization.CultureInfo culture) {
            // Convert the double to an int.
            int[] values = (int[])value;
            IList<TreeViewItem> result = new List<TreeViewItem>();
            foreach (int i in values) {
                result.Add(CreateItem(i));
            }
            return result;
        }

        public object ConvertBack(object value, Type targetType, object parameter, System.Globalization.CultureInfo culture) {
            throw new InvalidOperationException("Not implemented.");
        }
    }    
}

Note: I have previously managed to do lazy evaluation of the tree nodes by adding WPF event handlers and directly adding items when the event handlers are triggered. I'm trying to move away from that and use data binding instead (which I understand is more in spirit with "the WPF way").

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