I have a listview data on ItemsPage and when I select an item I can edit it and will update on database. My problem is, when a go back to ItemsPage I want to refresh the list
I already tried to call the method OnAppearing to try to refresh in OnItemSelected under the Navigation like this:
namespace TesteMasterDatail.Views
{
[XamlCompilation(XamlCompilationOptions.Compile)]
public partial class ItemsPage : ContentPage
{
ItemsViewModel viewModel;
public ItemsPage()
{
InitializeComponent();
BindingContext = viewModel = new ItemsViewModel();
}
async void OnItemSelected(object sender, SelectedItemChangedEventArgs args)
{
var item = args.SelectedItem as Item;
if (item == null)
return;
await Navigation.PushAsync(new ItemDetailPage(new ItemDetailViewModel(item)));
OnAppearing();
ItemsListView.SelectedItem = null;
}
async void AddItem_Clicked(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
await Navigation.PushModalAsync(new NavigationPage(new NewItemPage()));
}
protected override void OnAppearing()
{
base.OnAppearing();
if (viewModel.Items.Count == 0)
viewModel.LoadItemsCommand.Execute(null);
}
}
}
It didnt work cause the refresh happens before the edition
you could use MessagingCenter to refresh your list after you add new item or edit item in a new page like:
in ItemsPage :
public ItemsPage()
{
InitializeComponent();
BindingContext = viewModel = new ItemsViewModel();
MessagingCenter.Subscribe<ItemsPage> (this, "Refresh", () =>
{
// refresh the list when the "Refresh" message is received
});
}
in ItemDetailPage or NewItemPage,after edit item or add new item:
MessagingCenter.Send<ItemsPage>(this, "Refresh");
Of course you could also pass parameter by MessagingCenter
OnAppearing() should be called for you when the page is navigated to after PopAsync is called - you do not need to manually call it.
However, note that your LoadItemsCommand will still not fire in this case, because the VM is already initialized.
from the docs
When the PopAsync method is invoked, the following events occur:
-The page calling PopAsync has its OnDisappearing override invoked.
-The page being returned to has its OnAppearing override invoked.
-The PopAsync task returns.
trying to learn more about Tabbed Pages with i've built a very simple App containing three content Pages with a code like this:
public class Page1 : ContentPage
{
public Page1()
{
Content = new StackLayout
{
Children = {
new Label { Text = "Hello Page1" }
}
};
}
protected override void OnAppearing()
{
base.OnAppearing();
System.Diagnostics.Debug.WriteLine("Page 1 On Appearing");
}
protected override void OnDisappearing()
{
base.OnDisappearing();
System.Diagnostics.Debug.WriteLine("Page 1 Disappearing");
}
}
The Main Page looks like this:
public class MainPage : TabbedPage
{
public MainPage()
{
var page1 = new Page1();
page1.Title = "Page1";
var page2 = new Page2();
page2.Title = "Page2";
var page3 = new Page3();
page3.Title = "Page3";
Children.Add(page1);
Children.Add(page2);
Children.Add(page3);
}
}
Now when i click on a new tab, the OnDisappearing() method of the old tab is called, as well as the OnAppearing() method of new tab, BUT the content of the new page is not shown. It remains the content of the old page.
To show the content of the new page i have to click again on the tab.
Does anybody has experienced this kind of behaviour?
Best regards,
Marco
I have a simple two pages.
One has a listview.
So when clicks an item of the listView, go to another page.
But I click default back button on my win phone then I click an item of one again, navigation page doesn't work completely.
Here is my code snippet.
in first page
listview.itemselected += listview_ItemSelected;
private void listview_ItemSelected(object sender, SelectedItemChangedEventArgs e)
{
if (e.SelectedItem = null){
}
else {
Device.BeginInvokeOnMainThread(() => Navigation.PushAsync(new twopage()));
}
}
Please be aware that I am testing on UWP Project based on Xamarin.Form.
MainPage
Page1
this is my screen short
step 1
public App()
{
InitializeComponent();
var mainpage = new NavigationPage(new MainPage());
MainPage = mainpage;
}
step2
private void ListView_ItemSelected(object sender, SelectedItemChangedEventArgs e)
{
var page = new Page1();
Navigation.PushAsync(page);
}
I tried to use the back navigation by overriding OnBackButtonPressed, but somehow it wasn't get called at all. I am using the ContentPage and the latest 1.4.2 release.
Alright, after many hours I figured this one out. There are three parts to it.
#1 Handling the hardware back button on android. This one is easy, override OnBackButtonPressed. Remember, this is for a hardware back button and android only. It will not handle the navigation bar back button. As you can see, I was trying to back through a browser before backing out of the page, but you can put whatever logic you need in.
protected override bool OnBackButtonPressed()
{
if (_browser.CanGoBack)
{
_browser.GoBack();
return true;
}
else
{
//await Navigation.PopAsync(true);
base.OnBackButtonPressed();
return true;
}
}
#2 iOS navigation back button. This one was really tricky, if you look around the web you'll find a couple examples of replacing the back button with a new custom button, but it's almost impossible to get it to look like your other pages. In this case I made a transparent button that sits on top of the normal button.
[assembly: ExportRenderer(typeof(MyAdvantagePage), typeof
(MyAdvantagePageRenderer))]
namespace Advantage.MyAdvantage.MobileApp.iOS.Renderers
{
public class MyAdvantagePageRenderer : Xamarin.Forms.Platform.iOS.PageRenderer
{
public override void ViewWillAppear(bool animated)
{
base.ViewWillAppear(animated);
if (((MyAdvantagePage)Element).EnableBackButtonOverride)
{
SetCustomBackButton();
}
}
private void SetCustomBackButton()
{
UIButton btn = new UIButton();
btn.Frame = new CGRect(0, 0, 50, 40);
btn.BackgroundColor = UIColor.Clear;
btn.TouchDown += (sender, e) =>
{
// Whatever your custom back button click handling
if (((MyAdvantagePage)Element)?.
CustomBackButtonAction != null)
{
((MyAdvantagePage)Element)?.
CustomBackButtonAction.Invoke();
}
};
NavigationController.NavigationBar.AddSubview(btn);
}
}
}
Android, is tricky. In older versions and future versions of Forms once fixed, you can simply override the OnOptionsItemselected like this
public override bool OnOptionsItemSelected(IMenuItem item)
{
// check if the current item id
// is equals to the back button id
if (item.ItemId == 16908332)
{
// retrieve the current xamarin forms page instance
var currentpage = (MyAdvantagePage)
Xamarin.Forms.Application.
Current.MainPage.Navigation.
NavigationStack.LastOrDefault();
// check if the page has subscribed to
// the custom back button event
if (currentpage?.CustomBackButtonAction != null)
{
// invoke the Custom back button action
currentpage?.CustomBackButtonAction.Invoke();
// and disable the default back button action
return false;
}
// if its not subscribed then go ahead
// with the default back button action
return base.OnOptionsItemSelected(item);
}
else
{
// since its not the back button
//click, pass the event to the base
return base.OnOptionsItemSelected(item);
}
}
However, if you are using FormsAppCompatActivity, then you need to add onto your OnCreate in MainActivity this to set your toolbar:
Android.Support.V7.Widget.Toolbar toolbar = this.FindViewById<Android.Support.V7.Widget.Toolbar>(Resource.Id.toolbar);
SetSupportActionBar(toolbar);
But wait! If you have too old a version of .Forms or too new version, a bug will come up where toolbar is null. If this happens, the hacked together way I got it to work to make a deadline is like this. In OnCreate in MainActivity:
MobileApp.Pages.Articles.ArticleDetail.androdAction = () =>
{
Android.Support.V7.Widget.Toolbar toolbar = this.FindViewById<Android.Support.V7.Widget.Toolbar>(Resource.Id.toolbar);
SetSupportActionBar(toolbar);
};
ArticleDetail is a Page, and androidAction is an Action that I run on OnAppearing if the Platform is Android on my page. By this point in your app, toolbar will no longer be null.
Couple more steps, the iOS render we made above uses properties that you need to add to whatever page you are making the renderer for. I was making it for my MyAdvantagePage class that I made, which implements ContentPage . So in my MyAdvantagePage class I added
public Action CustomBackButtonAction { get; set; }
public static readonly BindableProperty EnableBackButtonOverrideProperty =
BindableProperty.Create(
nameof(EnableBackButtonOverride),
typeof(bool),
typeof(MyAdvantagePage),
false);
/// <summary>
/// Gets or Sets Custom Back button overriding state
/// </summary>
public bool EnableBackButtonOverride
{
get
{
return (bool)GetValue(EnableBackButtonOverrideProperty);
}
set
{
SetValue(EnableBackButtonOverrideProperty, value);
}
}
Now that that is all done, on any of my MyAdvantagePage I can add this
:
this.EnableBackButtonOverride = true;
this.CustomBackButtonAction = async () =>
{
if (_browser.CanGoBack)
{
_browser.GoBack();
}
else
{
await Navigation.PopAsync(true);
}
};
That should be everything to get it to work on Android hardware back, and navigation back for both android and iOS.
You are right, in your page class override OnBackButtonPressed and return true if you want to prevent navigation. It works fine for me and I have the same version.
protected override bool OnBackButtonPressed()
{
if (Condition)
return true;
return base.OnBackButtonPressed();
}
Depending on what exactly you are looking for (I would not recommend using this if you simply want to cancel back button navigation), OnDisappearing may be another option:
protected override void OnDisappearing()
{
//back button logic here
}
OnBackButtonPressed() this will be called when a hardware back button is pressed as in android. This will not work on the software back button press as in ios.
Additional to Kyle Answer
Set
Inside YOURPAGE
public static Action SetToolbar;
YOURPAGE OnAppearing
if (Device.RuntimePlatform == Device.Android)
{
SetToolbar.Invoke();
}
MainActivity
YOURPAGE.SetToolbar = () =>
{
Android.Support.V7.Widget.Toolbar toolbar =
this.FindViewById<Android.Support.V7.Widget.Toolbar>(Resource.Id.toolbar);
SetSupportActionBar(toolbar);
};
I use Prism libray and for handle the back button/action I extend INavigatedAware interface of Prism on my page and I implement this methods:
public void OnNavigatedFrom(INavigationParameters parameters)
{
if (parameters.GetNavigationMode() == NavigationMode.Back)
{
//Your code
}
}
public void OnNavigatedTo(INavigationParameters parameters)
{
}
Method OnNavigatedFrom is raised when user press back button from Navigation Bar (Android & iOS) and when user press Hardware back button (only for Android).
For anyone still fighting with this issue - basically you cannot intercept back navigation cross-platform. Having said that there are two approaches that effectively solve the problem:
Hide the NavigationPage back button with NavigationPage.ShowHasBackButton(this, false) and push a modal page that has a custom Back/Cancel/Close button
Intercept the back navigation natively for each platform. This is a good article that does it for iOS and Android: https://theconfuzedsourcecode.wordpress.com/2017/03/12/lets-override-navigation-bar-back-button-click-in-xamarin-forms/
For UWP you are on your own :)
Edit:
Well, not anymore since I did it :) It actually turned out to be pretty easy – there is just one back button and it’s supported by Forms so you just have to override ContentPage’s OnBackButtonPressed:
protected override bool OnBackButtonPressed()
{
if (Device.RuntimePlatform.Equals(Device.UWP))
{
OnClosePageRequested();
return true;
}
else
{
base.OnBackButtonPressed();
return false;
}
}
async void OnClosePageRequested()
{
var tdvm = (TaskDetailsViewModel)BindingContext;
if (tdvm.CanSaveTask())
{
var result = await DisplayAlert("Wait", "You have unsaved changes! Are you sure you want to go back?", "Discard changes", "Cancel");
if (result)
{
tdvm.DiscardChanges();
await Navigation.PopAsync(true);
}
}
else
{
await Navigation.PopAsync(true);
}
}
protected override bool OnBackButtonPressed()
{
base.OnBackButtonPressed();
return true;
}
base.OnBackButtonPressed() returns false on click of hardware back button.
In order to prevent operation of back button or prevent navigation to previous page. the overriding function should be returned as true. On return true, it stays on the current xamarin form page and state of page is also maintained.
The trick is to implement your own navigation page that inherits from NavigationPage. It has the appropriate events Pushed, Popped and PoppedToRoot.
A sample implementation could look like this:
public class PageLifetimeSupportingNavigationPage : NavigationPage
{
public PageLifetimeSupportingNavigationPage(Page content)
: base(content)
{
Init();
}
private void Init()
{
Pushed += (sender, e) => OpenPage(e.Page);
Popped += (sender, e) => ClosePage(e.Page);
PoppedToRoot += (sender, e) =>
{
var args = e as PoppedToRootEventArgs;
if (args == null)
return;
foreach (var page in args.PoppedPages.Reverse())
ClosePage(page);
};
}
private static void OpenPage(Page page)
{
if (page is IPageLifetime navpage)
navpage.OnOpening();
}
private static void ClosePage(Page page)
{
if (page is IPageLifetime navpage)
navpage.OnClosed();
page.BindingContext = null;
}
}
Pages would implement the following interface:
public interface IPageLifetime
{
void OnOpening();
void OnClosed();
}
This interface could be implemented in a base class for all pages and then delegate it's calls to it's view model.
The navigation page and could be created like this:
var navigationPage = new PageLifetimeSupportingNavigationPage(new MainPage());
MainPage would be the root page to show.
Of course you could also just use NavigationPage in the first place and subscribe to it's events without inheriting from it.
Maybe this can be usefull, You need to hide the back button, and then replace with your own button:
public static UIViewController AddBackButton(this UIViewController controller, EventHandler ev){
controller.NavigationItem.HidesBackButton = true;
var btn = new UIBarButtonItem(UIImage.FromFile("myIcon.png"), UIBarButtonItemStyle.Plain, ev);
UIBarButtonItem[] items = new[] { btn };
controller.NavigationItem.LeftBarButtonItems = items;
return controller;
}
public static UIViewController DeleteBack(this UIViewController controller)
{
controller.NavigationItem.LeftBarButtonItems = null;
return controller;
}
Then call them into these methods:
public override void ViewWillAppear(bool animated)
{
base.ViewWillAppear(animated);
this.AddBackButton(DoSomething);
UpdateFrames();
}
public override void ViewWillDisappear(Boolean animated)
{
this.DeleteBackButton();
}
public void DoSomething(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
//Do a barrel roll
}
Another way around is to use Rg.Plugins.Popup Which allows you to implement nice popup. It uses another NavigationStack => Rg.Plugins.Popup.Services.PopupNavigation.Instance.PopupStack. So your page won't be wrap around the NavigationBar.
In your case I would simply
Create a full page popup with opaque background
Override ↩️ OnBackButtonPressed for Android on ⚠️ParentPage⚠️ with something like this:
protected override bool OnBackButtonPressed()
{
return Rg.Plugins.Popup.Services.PopupNavigation.Instance.PopupStack.Any();
}
Since the back-button affect the usual NavigationStack your parent would pop out whenever the user try to use it while your "popup is showing".
Now what? Xaml what ever you want to properly close your popup with all the check you want.
💥 Problem solved for these targets💥
[x] Android
[x] iOS
[-] Windows Phone (Obsolete. Use v1.1.0-pre5 if WP is needed)
[x] UWP (Min Target: 10.0.16299)
How do you switch between pages in Xamarin Forms?
My main page is a ContentPage and I don't want to switch to something like a Tabbed Page.
I've been able to pseudo-do it by finding parents of the controls that should trigger the new page until I find the ContentPage and then swap out the Content with controls for a new page. But this seems really sloppy.
In the App class you can set the MainPage to a Navigation Page and set the root page to your ContentPage:
public App ()
{
// The root page of your application
MainPage = new NavigationPage( new FirstContentPage() );
}
Then in your first ContentPage call:
Navigation.PushAsync (new SecondContentPage ());
Xamarin.Forms supports multiple navigation hosts built-in:
NavigationPage, where the next page slide in,
TabbedPage, the one you don't like
CarouselPage, that allows for switching left and right to next/prev pages.
On top of this, all pages also supports PushModalAsync() which just push a new page on top of the existing one.
At the very end, if you want to make sure the user can't get back to the previous page (using a gesture or the back hardware button), you can keep the same Page displayed and replace its Content.
The suggested options of replacing the root page works as well, but you'll have to handle that differently for each platform.
If your project has been set up as a PCL forms project (and very likely as Shared Forms as well but I haven't tried that) there is a class App.cs that looks like this:
public class App
{
public static Page GetMainPage ()
{
AuditorDB.Model.Extensions.AutoTimestamp = true;
return new NavigationPage (new LoginPage ());
}
}
you can modify the GetMainPage method to return a new TabbedPaged or some other page you have defined in the project
From there on you can add commands or event handlers to execute code and do
// to show OtherPage and be able to go back
Navigation.PushAsync(new OtherPage());
// to show AnotherPage and not have a Back button
Navigation.PushModalAsync(new AnotherPage());
// to go back one step on the navigation stack
Navigation.PopAsync();
Push a new page onto the stack, then remove the current page. This results in a switch.
item.Tapped += async (sender, e) => {
await Navigation.PushAsync (new SecondPage ());
Navigation.RemovePage(this);
};
You need to be in a Navigation Page first:
MainPage = NavigationPage(new FirstPage());
Switching content isn't ideal as you have just one big page and one set of page events like OnAppearing ect.
If you do not want to go the previous page i.e. do not let the user go back to the login screen once authorization is done, then you can use;
App.Current.MainPage = new HomePage();
If you want to enable back functionality, just use
Navigation.PushModalAsync(new HomePage())
Seems like this thread is very popular and it will be sad not to mention here that there is an alternative way - ViewModel First Navigation. Most of the MVVM frameworks out there using it, however if you want to understand what it is about, continue reading.
All the official Xamarin.Forms documentation is demonstrating a simple, yet slightly not MVVM pure solution. That is because the Page(View) should know nothing about the ViewModel and vice versa. Here is a great example of this violation:
// C# version
public partial class MyPage : ContentPage
{
public MyPage()
{
InitializeComponent();
// Violation
this.BindingContext = new MyViewModel();
}
}
// XAML version
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<ContentPage
xmlns="http://xamarin.com/schemas/2014/forms"
xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2009/xaml"
xmlns:viewmodels="clr-namespace:MyApp.ViewModel"
x:Class="MyApp.Views.MyPage">
<ContentPage.BindingContext>
<!-- Violation -->
<viewmodels:MyViewModel />
</ContentPage.BindingContext>
</ContentPage>
If you have a 2 pages application this approach might be good for you. However if you are working on a big enterprise solution you better go with a ViewModel First Navigation approach. It is slightly more complicated but much cleaner approach that allow you to navigate between ViewModels instead of navigation between Pages(Views). One of the advantages beside clear separation of concerns is that you could easily pass parameters to the next ViewModel or execute an async initialization code right after navigation. Now to details.
(I will try to simplify all the code examples as much as possible).
1. First of all we need a place where we could register all our objects and optionally define their lifetime. For this matter we can use an IOC container, you can choose one yourself. In this example I will use Autofac(it is one of the fastest available). We can keep a reference to it in the App so it will be available globally (not a good idea, but needed for simplification):
public class DependencyResolver
{
static IContainer container;
public DependencyResolver(params Module[] modules)
{
var builder = new ContainerBuilder();
if (modules != null)
foreach (var module in modules)
builder.RegisterModule(module);
container = builder.Build();
}
public T Resolve<T>() => container.Resolve<T>();
public object Resolve(Type type) => container.Resolve(type);
}
public partial class App : Application
{
public DependencyResolver DependencyResolver { get; }
// Pass here platform specific dependencies
public App(Module platformIocModule)
{
InitializeComponent();
DependencyResolver = new DependencyResolver(platformIocModule, new IocModule());
MainPage = new WelcomeView();
}
/* The rest of the code ... */
}
2.We will need an object responsible for retrieving a Page (View) for a specific ViewModel and vice versa. The second case might be useful in case of setting the root/main page of the app. For that we should agree on a simple convention that all the ViewModels should be in ViewModels directory and Pages(Views) should be in the Views directory. In other words ViewModels should live in [MyApp].ViewModels namespace and Pages(Views) in [MyApp].Views namespace. In addition to that we should agree that WelcomeView(Page) should have a WelcomeViewModel and etc. Here is a code example of a mapper:
public class TypeMapperService
{
public Type MapViewModelToView(Type viewModelType)
{
var viewName = viewModelType.FullName.Replace("Model", string.Empty);
var viewAssemblyName = GetTypeAssemblyName(viewModelType);
var viewTypeName = GenerateTypeName("{0}, {1}", viewName, viewAssemblyName);
return Type.GetType(viewTypeName);
}
public Type MapViewToViewModel(Type viewType)
{
var viewModelName = viewType.FullName.Replace(".Views.", ".ViewModels.");
var viewModelAssemblyName = GetTypeAssemblyName(viewType);
var viewTypeModelName = GenerateTypeName("{0}Model, {1}", viewModelName, viewModelAssemblyName);
return Type.GetType(viewTypeModelName);
}
string GetTypeAssemblyName(Type type) => type.GetTypeInfo().Assembly.FullName;
string GenerateTypeName(string format, string typeName, string assemblyName) =>
string.Format(CultureInfo.InvariantCulture, format, typeName, assemblyName);
}
3.For the case of setting a root page we will need sort of ViewModelLocator that will set the BindingContext automatically:
public static class ViewModelLocator
{
public static readonly BindableProperty AutoWireViewModelProperty =
BindableProperty.CreateAttached("AutoWireViewModel", typeof(bool), typeof(ViewModelLocator), default(bool), propertyChanged: OnAutoWireViewModelChanged);
public static bool GetAutoWireViewModel(BindableObject bindable) =>
(bool)bindable.GetValue(AutoWireViewModelProperty);
public static void SetAutoWireViewModel(BindableObject bindable, bool value) =>
bindable.SetValue(AutoWireViewModelProperty, value);
static ITypeMapperService mapper = (Application.Current as App).DependencyResolver.Resolve<ITypeMapperService>();
static void OnAutoWireViewModelChanged(BindableObject bindable, object oldValue, object newValue)
{
var view = bindable as Element;
var viewType = view.GetType();
var viewModelType = mapper.MapViewToViewModel(viewType);
var viewModel = (Application.Current as App).DependencyResolver.Resolve(viewModelType);
view.BindingContext = viewModel;
}
}
// Usage example
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<ContentPage
xmlns="http://xamarin.com/schemas/2014/forms"
xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2009/xaml"
xmlns:viewmodels="clr-namespace:MyApp.ViewModel"
viewmodels:ViewModelLocator.AutoWireViewModel="true"
x:Class="MyApp.Views.MyPage">
</ContentPage>
4.Finally we will need a NavigationService that will support ViewModel First Navigation approach:
public class NavigationService
{
TypeMapperService mapperService { get; }
public NavigationService(TypeMapperService mapperService)
{
this.mapperService = mapperService;
}
protected Page CreatePage(Type viewModelType)
{
Type pageType = mapperService.MapViewModelToView(viewModelType);
if (pageType == null)
{
throw new Exception($"Cannot locate page type for {viewModelType}");
}
return Activator.CreateInstance(pageType) as Page;
}
protected Page GetCurrentPage()
{
var mainPage = Application.Current.MainPage;
if (mainPage is MasterDetailPage)
{
return ((MasterDetailPage)mainPage).Detail;
}
// TabbedPage : MultiPage<Page>
// CarouselPage : MultiPage<ContentPage>
if (mainPage is TabbedPage || mainPage is CarouselPage)
{
return ((MultiPage<Page>)mainPage).CurrentPage;
}
return mainPage;
}
public Task PushAsync(Page page, bool animated = true)
{
var navigationPage = Application.Current.MainPage as NavigationPage;
return navigationPage.PushAsync(page, animated);
}
public Task PopAsync(bool animated = true)
{
var mainPage = Application.Current.MainPage as NavigationPage;
return mainPage.Navigation.PopAsync(animated);
}
public Task PushModalAsync<TViewModel>(object parameter = null, bool animated = true) where TViewModel : BaseViewModel =>
InternalPushModalAsync(typeof(TViewModel), animated, parameter);
public Task PopModalAsync(bool animated = true)
{
var mainPage = GetCurrentPage();
if (mainPage != null)
return mainPage.Navigation.PopModalAsync(animated);
throw new Exception("Current page is null.");
}
async Task InternalPushModalAsync(Type viewModelType, bool animated, object parameter)
{
var page = CreatePage(viewModelType);
var currentNavigationPage = GetCurrentPage();
if (currentNavigationPage != null)
{
await currentNavigationPage.Navigation.PushModalAsync(page, animated);
}
else
{
throw new Exception("Current page is null.");
}
await (page.BindingContext as BaseViewModel).InitializeAsync(parameter);
}
}
As you may see there is a BaseViewModel - abstract base class for all the ViewModels where you can define methods like InitializeAsync that will get executed right after the navigation. And here is an example of navigation:
public class WelcomeViewModel : BaseViewModel
{
public ICommand NewGameCmd { get; }
public ICommand TopScoreCmd { get; }
public ICommand AboutCmd { get; }
public WelcomeViewModel(INavigationService navigation) : base(navigation)
{
NewGameCmd = new Command(async () => await Navigation.PushModalAsync<GameViewModel>());
TopScoreCmd = new Command(async () => await navigation.PushModalAsync<TopScoreViewModel>());
AboutCmd = new Command(async () => await navigation.PushModalAsync<AboutViewModel>());
}
}
As you understand this approach is more complicated, harder to debug and might be confusing. However there are many advantages plus you actually don't have to implement it yourself since most of the MVVM frameworks support it out of the box. The code example that is demonstrated here is available on github. There are plenty of good articles about ViewModel First Navigation approach and there is a free Enterprise Application Patterns using Xamarin.Forms eBook which is explaining this and many other interesting topics in detail.
By using the PushAsync() method you can push and PopModalAsync() you can pop pages to and from the navigation stack. In my code example below I have a Navigation page (Root Page) and from this page I push a content page that is a login page once I am complete with my login page I pop back to the root page
~~~ Navigation can be thought of as a last-in, first-out stack of Page objects.To move from one page to another an application will push a new page onto this stack. To return back to the previous page the application will pop the current page from the stack. This navigation in Xamarin.Forms is handled by the INavigation interface
Xamarin.Forms has a NavigationPage class that implements this interface and will manage the stack of Pages. The NavigationPage class will also add a navigation bar to the top of the screen that displays a title and will also have a platform appropriate Back button that will return to the previous page. The following code shows how to wrap a NavigationPage around the first page in an application:
Reference to content listed above and a link you should review for more information on Xamarin Forms, see the Navigation section:
http://developer.xamarin.com/guides/cross-platform/xamarin-forms/introduction-to-xamarin-forms/
~~~
public class MainActivity : AndroidActivity
{
protected override void OnCreate(Bundle bundle)
{
base.OnCreate(bundle);
Xamarin.Forms.Forms.Init(this, bundle);
// Set our view from the "main" layout resource
SetPage(BuildView());
}
static Page BuildView()
{
var mainNav = new NavigationPage(new RootPage());
return mainNav;
}
}
public class RootPage : ContentPage
{
async void ShowLoginDialog()
{
var page = new LoginPage();
await Navigation.PushModalAsync(page);
}
}
//Removed code for simplicity only the pop is displayed
private async void AuthenticationResult(bool isValid)
{
await navigation.PopModalAsync();
}
In App.Xaml.Cs:
MainPage = new NavigationPage( new YourPage());
When you wish to navigate from YourPage to the next page you do:
await Navigation.PushAsync(new YourSecondPage());
You can read more about Xamarin Forms navigation here: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/xamarin/xamarin-forms/app-fundamentals/navigation/hierarchical
Microsoft has quite good docs on this.
There is also the newer concept of the Shell. It allows for a new way of structuring your application and simplifies navigation in some cases.
Intro: https://devblogs.microsoft.com/xamarin/shell-xamarin-forms-4-0-getting-started/
Video on basics of Shell: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0y1bUAcOjZY&t=3112s
Docs: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/xamarin/xamarin-forms/app-fundamentals/shell/
Call:
((App)App.Current).ChangeScreen(new Map());
Create this method inside App.xaml.cs:
public void ChangeScreen(Page page)
{
MainPage = page;
}
In Xamarin we have page called NavigationPage. It holds stack of ContentPages.
NavigationPage has method like PushAsync() and PopAsync(). PushAsync add a page at the top of the stack, at that time that page will become the currently active page. PopAsync() method remove the page from the top of the stack.
In App.Xaml.Cs set like.
MainPage = new NavigationPage( new YourPage());
From YourPage you await Navigation.PushAsync(new newPage()); this method will add newPage at the top of the stack. At this time newPage will be currently active page.
One page to another page navigation in Xamarin.forms using Navigation property Below sample code
void addClicked(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
//var createEmp = (Employee)BindingContext;
Employee emp = new Employee();
emp.Address = AddressEntry.Text;
App.Database.SaveItem(emp);
this.Navigation.PushAsync(new EmployeeDetails());
this.Navigation.PushModalAsync(new EmployeeDetails());
}
To navigate one page to another page with in view cell Below code Xamrian.forms
private async void BtnEdit_Clicked1(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
App.Database.GetItem(empid);
await App.Current.MainPage.Navigation.PushModalAsync(new EmployeeRegistration(empid));
}
Example like below
public class OptionsViewCell : ViewCell
{
int empid;
Button btnEdit;
public OptionsViewCell()
{
}
protected override void OnBindingContextChanged()
{
base.OnBindingContextChanged();
if (this.BindingContext == null)
return;
dynamic obj = BindingContext;
empid = Convert.ToInt32(obj.Eid);
var lblname = new Label
{
BackgroundColor = Color.Lime,
Text = obj.Ename,
};
var lblAddress = new Label
{
BackgroundColor = Color.Yellow,
Text = obj.Address,
};
var lblphonenumber = new Label
{
BackgroundColor = Color.Pink,
Text = obj.phonenumber,
};
var lblemail = new Label
{
BackgroundColor = Color.Purple,
Text = obj.email,
};
var lbleid = new Label
{
BackgroundColor = Color.Silver,
Text = (empid).ToString(),
};
//var lbleid = new Label
//{
// BackgroundColor = Color.Silver,
// // HorizontalOptions = LayoutOptions.CenterAndExpand
//};
//lbleid.SetBinding(Label.TextProperty, "Eid");
Button btnDelete = new Button
{
BackgroundColor = Color.Gray,
Text = "Delete",
//WidthRequest = 15,
//HeightRequest = 20,
TextColor = Color.Red,
HorizontalOptions = LayoutOptions.EndAndExpand,
};
btnDelete.Clicked += BtnDelete_Clicked;
//btnDelete.PropertyChanged += BtnDelete_PropertyChanged;
btnEdit = new Button
{
BackgroundColor = Color.Gray,
Text = "Edit",
TextColor = Color.Green,
};
// lbleid.SetBinding(Label.TextProperty, "Eid");
btnEdit.Clicked += BtnEdit_Clicked1; ;
//btnEdit.Clicked += async (s, e) =>{
// await App.Current.MainPage.Navigation.PushModalAsync(new EmployeeRegistration());
//};
View = new StackLayout()
{
Orientation = StackOrientation.Horizontal,
BackgroundColor = Color.White,
Children = { lbleid, lblname, lblAddress, lblemail, lblphonenumber, btnDelete, btnEdit },
};
}
private async void BtnEdit_Clicked1(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
App.Database.GetItem(empid);
await App.Current.MainPage.Navigation.PushModalAsync(new EmployeeRegistration(empid));
}
private void BtnDelete_Clicked(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
// var eid = Convert.ToInt32(empid);
// var item = (Xamarin.Forms.Button)sender;
int eid = empid;
App.Database.DeleteItem(empid);
}
}
After PushAsync use PopAsync (with this) to remove current page.
await Navigation.PushAsync(new YourSecondPage());
this.Navigation.PopAsync(this);
XAML page add this
<ContentPage.ToolbarItems>
<ToolbarItem Text="Next" Order="Primary"
Activated="Handle_Activated"/>
</ContentPage.ToolbarItems>
on the CS page
async void Handle_Activated(object sender, System.EventArgs e)
{
await App.Navigator.PushAsync(new PAGE());
}