Introduction
Microsoft Office is undoubtedly one of the best selling products in the world today! Thy always try and innovate… In this CodeProject article, I will try and recreate the Microsoft Outlook Calendar control using WPF.
All elements/controls in WPF are look-less! This reduces the need to create custom controls. A button is an element that supports clicking on it and then raising a Click
event, but there is no restriction on how this button should look!
So, with my WPF think cap on, I tried to find a control that I could restyle to fit my calendar control… After trying out a few ideas, I decided to rather create a custom control.
Here are the basic elements of my custom Calendar
control:
CalendarLedgerItem and CalendarLedger
The ledger indicates the timeslot time.
CalendarTimeslotItem
Each day is divided into 30 minute slots (represented by CalendarTimeslotItem
). CalendarTimeslotItem
provides a very simple hover style to hint to the user that by clicking on the timeslot, you can add an appointment. The CalendarTimeslotItem
also exposes (and raises) AddAppointmentEvent
, which gets bubbled to the calendar (by clicking on the timeslot). CalendarTimeslotItem
derives from ButtonBase
.
public static readonly RoutedEvent AddAppointmentEvent =
EventManager.RegisterRoutedEvent("AddAppointment", RoutingStrategy.Bubble,
typeof(RoutedEventHandler), typeof(CalendarTimeslotItem));
CalendarAppointmentItem
CalendarAppointmentItem
is a very generic container to show an appointment (similar to ListboxItem
). I cheat a little by assuming that what every “item” CalendarDay
binds to will have a StartTime
and EndTime
property!
<Setter Property="StartTime" Value="{Binding StartTime}" />
<Setter Property="EndTime" Value="{Binding EndTime}" />
[Note] I know this sucks a little… I will address this in part 2!
CalendarDay
The CalendarDay
is the heart of our Outlook calendar. The CalendarDay
derives from ItemsControl
.
protected override DependencyObject GetContainerForItemOverride()
{
return new CalendarAppointmentItem();
}
protected override bool IsItemItsOwnContainerOverride(object item)
{
return (item is CalendarAppointmentItem);
}
Each “item” added to the CalendarDay
will implicitly have CalendarAppointmentItem
as its container. This will all “magically” work, provided that the objects bound to the ItemsControl
have the StartTime
and EndTime
properties!
TimeslotPanel
The last part we have to cover before we look at the calendar control is the TimeslotPanel
. This custom layout panel will position each “item” in the CalendarDay
control based on its start and end times!
<ItemsPanelTemplate>
<local:TimeslotPanel />
</ItemsPanelTemplate>
Calendar
The Calendar
adds an owner to the CalendarTimeslotItem.AddAppointmentEvent
.
public static readonly RoutedEvent AddAppointmentEvent =
CalendarTimeslotItem.AddAppointmentEvent.AddOwner(typeof(CalendarDay));
Currently, the Calendar
control is the only control that explicitly “knows” what the date is! It has a CurrentDate
property.
public static readonly DependencyProperty CurrentDateProperty =
DependencyProperty.Register("CurrentDate", typeof(DateTime), typeof(Calendar),
new FrameworkPropertyMetadata((DateTime)DateTime.Now,
new PropertyChangedCallback(OnCurrentDateChanged)));
The Calendar
control also exposes two commands that can be used to change the current date:
public static readonly RoutedCommand NextDay =
new RoutedCommand("NextDay", typeof(Calendar));
public static readonly RoutedCommand PreviousDay =
new RoutedCommand("PreviousDay", typeof(Calendar));
These commands are self explanatory!
I have also created a very basic model:
This model is used as the data source!
public static readonly DependencyProperty AppointmentsProperty =
DependencyProperty.Register("Appointments",
typeof(IEnumerable<Appointment>), typeof(Calendar),
new FrameworkPropertyMetadata(null,
new PropertyChangedCallback(Calendar.OnAppointmentsChanged)));
The only tricky part now is how to get the data bound to my Appointments
property into my ItemsControl
?
Introducing filters… Rob Conery’s MVC Storefront uses a similar approach!
public static class Filters
{
public static IEnumerable<Appointment> ByDate(
thisIEnumerable<Appointment> appointments, DateTime date)
{
var app = froma inappointments
wherea.StartTime.Date == date.Date
selecta;
return app;
}
}
This extension method allows me to “filter” my appointments by date (ignoring the time). Here is how it is currently used:
private void FilterAppointments()
{
DateTime byDate = CurrentDate;
CalendarDay day = this.GetTemplateChild("day") as CalendarDay;
day.ItemsSource = Appointments.ByDate(byDate);
TextBlock dayHeader = this.GetTemplateChild("dayHeader") as TextBlock;
dayHeader.Text = byDate.DayOfWeek.ToString();
}
This approach allows me to relatively easily extend the calendar control to support a day or week view (by just adding multiple CalendarDay
controls).
And, that is it for part 1... If you found this article interesting, please vote for it, and also visit my blog!