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Focus Overview

In WPF there are two main concepts that pertain to focus: keyboard focus and logical focus. Keyboard focus refers to the element that receives keyboard input and logical focus refers to the element in a focus scope that has focus. These concepts are discussed in detail in this overview. Understanding the difference in these concepts is important for creating complex applications that have multiple regions where focus can be obtained.

The major classes that participate in focus management are the Keyboard class, the FocusManager class, and the base element classes, such as UIElement and ContentElement. For more information about the base elements, see the Base Elements Overview.

The Keyboard class is concerned primarily with keyboard focus and the FocusManager is concerned primarily with logical focus, but this is not an absolute distinction. An element that has keyboard focus will also have logical focus, but an element that has logical focus does not necessarily have keyboard focus. This is apparent when you use the Keyboard class to set the element that has keyboard focus, for it also sets logical focus on the element.

This topic contains the following sections.

  • Keyboard Focus
  • Logical Focus
  • Keyboard Navigation
  • Manipulating Focus Programmatically
  • Focus Events
  • Related Topics

Keyboard Focus

Keyboard focus refers to the element that is currently receiving keyboard input. There can be only one element on the whole desktop that has keyboard focus. In WPF, the element that has keyboard focus will have IsKeyboardFocused set to true. The static property FocusedElement on the Keyboard class gets the element that currently has keyboard focus.

In order for an element to obtain keyboard focus, the Focusable and the IsVisible properties = on the base elements must be set to true. Some classes, such as the Panel class, have Focusable set to false by default; therefore, you must set Focusable to true if you want the element to be able to obtain keyboard focus.

Keyboard focus can be obtained through user interaction with the UI, such as tabbing to an element or clicking the mouse on certain elements. Keyboard focus can also be obtained programmatically by using the Focus method on the Keyboard class. The Focus method tries to give the specified element keyboard focus. The returned element is the element that has keyboard focus.

The following example uses the Focus method to set keyboard focus on a Button.

private void OnLoaded(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
    // Sets keyboard focus on the first Button in the sample.
    Keyboard.Focus(firstButton);
}

The IsKeyboardFocused property on the base element classes gets a value indicating whether the element has keyboard focus. The IsKeyboardFocusWithin property on the base element classes gets a value indicating whether the element or any one of its visual child elements have keyboard focus.

When setting initial focus at application startup, the element to receive focus must be connected to a PresentationSource and the element must have Focusable and IsVisible set to true. The recommended place to set initial focus is in the Loaded event handler. A Dispatcher callback can also be used by calling Invoke or BeginInvoke.

Logical Focus

Logical focus refers to the System.Windows.Input.FocusManager.FocusedElement in a focus scope. A focus scope is an element that keeps track of the FocusedElement within its scope. When keyboard focus leaves a focus scope, the focused element will lose keyboard focus but will retain logical focus. When keyboard focus returns to the focus scope, the focused element will obtain keyboard focus. This allows for keyboard focus to be changed between multiple focus scopes but insures that the focused element in the focus scope regains keyboard focus when focus returns to the focus scope.

There can be multiple elements that have logical focus in an application, but there may only be one element that has logical focus in a particular focus scope.

An element that has keyboard focus has logical focus for the focus scope it belongs to.

An element can be turned into a focus scope in Extensible Application Markup Language (XAML) by setting the FocusManager attached property IsFocusScope to true. In code, an element can be turned into a focus scope by calling SetIsFocusScope.

The following example makes a StackPanel into a focus scope by setting the IsFocusScope attached property.

<StackPanel Name="focusScope1" 
            FocusManager.IsFocusScope="True"
            Height="200" Width="200">
  <Button Name="button1" Height="50" Width="50"/>
  <Button Name="button2" Height="50" Width="50"/>
</StackPanel>
StackPanel focuseScope2 = new StackPanel();
FocusManager.SetIsFocusScope(focuseScope2, true);

GetFocusScope returns the focus scope for the specified element.

Classes in WPF which are focus scopes by default are Window, MenuItem, ToolBar, and ContextMenu.

GetFocusedElement gets the focused element for the specified focus scope. SetFocusedElement sets the focused element in the specified focus scope. SetFocusedElement is typically used to set the initial focused element.

The following example sets the focused element on a focus scope and gets the focused element of a focus scope.

// Sets the focused element in focusScope1
// focusScope1 is a StackPanel.
FocusManager.SetFocusedElement(focusScope1, button2);

// Gets the focused element for focusScope 1
IInputElement focusedElement = FocusManager.GetFocusedElement(focusScope1);

Keyboard Navigation

The KeyboardNavigation class is responsible for implementing default keyboard focus navigation when one of the navigation keys is pressed. The navigation keys are: Tab, Shift+Tab, Ctrl+Tab, Ctrl+Shift+Tab, UpArrow, DownArrow, LeftArrow, and RightArrow keys.

The navigation behavior of a navigation container can be changed by setting the attached KeyboardNavigation properties TabNavigation, ControlTabNavigation, and DirectionalNavigation. These properties are of type KeyboardNavigationMode and the possible values are Continue, Local, Contained, Cycle, Once, and None. The default value is Continue, which means the element is not a navigation container.

The following example creates a Menu with a number of MenuItem objects. The TabNavigation attached property is set to Cycle on the Menu. When focus is changed using the tab key within the Menu, focus will move from each element and when the last element is reached focus will return to the first element.

<Menu KeyboardNavigation.TabNavigation="Cycle">
  <MenuItem Header="Menu Item 1" />
  <MenuItem Header="Menu Item 2" />
  <MenuItem Header="Menu Item 3" />
  <MenuItem Header="Menu Item 4" />
</Menu>
Menu navigationMenu = new Menu();
MenuItem item1 = new MenuItem();
MenuItem item2 = new MenuItem();
MenuItem item3 = new MenuItem();
MenuItem item4 = new MenuItem();

navigationMenu.Items.Add(item1);
navigationMenu.Items.Add(item2);
navigationMenu.Items.Add(item3);
navigationMenu.Items.Add(item4);

KeyboardNavigation.SetTabNavigation(navigationMenu, 
    KeyboardNavigationMode.Cycle);

Manipulating Focus Programmatically

Additional API to work with focus are MoveFocus and PredictFocus.

MoveFocus changes focus to the next element in the application. A TraversalRequest is used to specify the direction. The FocusNavigationDirection passed to MoveFocus specifies the different directions focus can be moved, such as First, Last, Up and Down.

The following example uses MoveFocus to change the focused element. For the complete source code for this example, see the Manipulate Focus Programmatically Sample.

// Creating a FocusNavigationDirection object and setting it to a
// local field that contains the direction selected.
FocusNavigationDirection focusDirection = _focusMoveValue;

// MoveFocus takes a TraveralReqest as its argument.
TraversalRequest request = new TraversalRequest(focusDirection);

// Gets the element with keyboard focus.
UIElement elementWithFocus = Keyboard.FocusedElement as UIElement;

// Change keyboard focus.
if (elementWithFocus != null)
{
    elementWithFocus.MoveFocus(request);
}

PredictFocus returns the object which would receive focus if focus were to be changed. Currently, only Up, Down, Left, and Right are supported by PredictFocus.

Focus Events

The events related to keyboard focus are PreviewGotKeyboardFocus, GotKeyboardFocus and PreviewLostKeyboardFocus, LostKeyboardFocus. The attached events are defined on the Keyboard class, but are accessible on the base element classes. For more information about events, see the Routed Events Overview.

GotKeyboardFocus is raised when the element obtains keyboard focus. LostKeyboardFocus is raised when the element loses keyboard focus. If the PreviewGotKeyboardFocus event or the PreviewLostKeyboardFocusEvent event is handled and Handled is set to true, then focus will not change.

The following example attaches GotKeyboardFocus and LostKeyboardFocus event handlers to a TextBox.

<Border BorderBrush="Black" BorderThickness="1"
        Width="200" Height="100" Margin="5">
  <StackPanel>
    <Label HorizontalAlignment="Center" Content="Type Text In This TextBox" />
    <TextBox Width="175"
             Height="50" 
             Margin="5"
             TextWrapping="Wrap"
             HorizontalAlignment="Center"
             VerticalScrollBarVisibility="Auto"
             GotKeyboardFocus="TextBoxGotKeyboardFocus"
             LostKeyboardFocus="TextBoxLostKeyboardFocus"
             KeyDown="SourceTextKeyDown"/>
  </StackPanel>
</Border>

When the TextBox obtains keyboard focus, the Background property of the TextBox is changed to LightBlue.

private void TextBoxGotKeyboardFocus(object sender, KeyboardFocusChangedEventArgs e)
{
    TextBox source = e.Source as TextBox;

    if (source != null)
    {
        // Change the TextBox color when it obtains focus.
        source.Background = Brushes.LightBlue;

        // Clear the TextBox.
        source.Clear();
    }
}

When the TextBox loses keyboard focus, the Background property of the TextBox is changed back to white.

private void TextBoxLostKeyboardFocus(object sender, KeyboardFocusChangedEventArgs e)
{
    TextBox source = e.Source as TextBox;

    if (source != null)
    {
        // Change the TextBox color when it loses focus.
        source.Background = Brushes.White;

        // Set the  hit counter back to zero and updates the display.
        this.ResetCounter();
    }
}

The events related to logical focus are GotFocus and LostFocus. These events are defined on the FocusManager as attached events, but the FocusManager does not expose CLR event wrappers. UIElement and ContentElement alias these events and expose them.

See Also

Reference

FocusManager
UIElement
ContentElement

Concepts

Input Overview
Base Elements Overview