Quickstart: Determining device orientation with the SimpleOrientation sensor (C#)
You can use the SimpleOrientation sensor to determine device orientation with an app written in C#.
Apps use the SimpleOrientation sensor to determine the current device orientation (portrait up, portrait down, landscape left, landscape right) as well as the device's face-up or face-down status.
Roadmap: How does this topic relate to others? See: Roadmap for Windows Runtime apps using C# or Visual Basic.
Rather than returning properties like "portrait up" or "landscape left", this sensor returns a rotation value: "Not rotated", "Rotated90DegreesCounterclockwise", and so on. The following table maps common orientation properties to the corresponding sensor reading.
Orientation | Corresponding sensor reading |
---|---|
Portrait Up | NotRotated |
Landscape Left | Rotated90DegreesCounterclockwise |
Portrait Down | Rotated180DegreesCounterclockwise |
Landscape Right | Rotated270DegreesCounterclockwise |
Objective: After completing this quickstart you will understand how to use the SimpleOrientation sensor to detect changes in movement and face-up or face-down status.
Prerequisites
You should be familiar with XAML, Visual C#, and events.
The device or emulator that you're using must support an accelerometer.
Time to complete: 20 minutes.
Instructions
1. Open Microsoft Visual Studio
Open an instance of Microsoft Visual Studio.
2. Create a new project
Create a new project, choosing a Blank App from the Visual C#/Store Apps project types.
3. Replace the C# code
Open your project's MainPage.xaml.cs file and replace the existing code with the following.
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.IO;
using System.Linq;
using Windows.Foundation;
using Windows.Foundation.Collections;
using Windows.UI.Xaml;
using Windows.UI.Xaml.Controls;
using Windows.UI.Xaml.Controls.Primitives;
using Windows.UI.Xaml.Data;
using Windows.UI.Xaml.Input;
using Windows.UI.Xaml.Media;
using Windows.UI.Xaml.Navigation;
using Windows.UI.Core;
using Windows.Devices.Sensors;
// The Blank Page item template is documented at https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/p/?linkid=234238
namespace App1
{
/// <summary>
/// An empty page that can be used on its own or navigated to within a Frame.
/// </summary>
public sealed partial class MainPage : Page
{
// Sensor and dispatcher variables
private SimpleOrientationSensor _simpleorientation;
// This event handler writes the current sensor reading to
// a text block on the app's main page.
private async void OrientationChanged(object sender, SimpleOrientationSensorOrientationChangedEventArgs e)
{
await Dispatcher.RunAsync(CoreDispatcherPriority.Normal, () =>
{
SimpleOrientation orientation = e.Orientation;
switch (orientation)
{
case SimpleOrientation.NotRotated:
txtOrientation.Text = "Not Rotated";
break;
case SimpleOrientation.Rotated90DegreesCounterclockwise:
txtOrientation.Text = "Rotated 90 Degrees Counterclockwise";
break;
case SimpleOrientation.Rotated180DegreesCounterclockwise:
txtOrientation.Text = "Rotated 180 Degrees Counterclockwise";
break;
case SimpleOrientation.Rotated270DegreesCounterclockwise:
txtOrientation.Text = "Rotated 270 Degrees Counterclockwise";
break;
case SimpleOrientation.Faceup:
txtOrientation.Text = "Faceup";
break;
case SimpleOrientation.Facedown:
txtOrientation.Text = "Facedown";
break;
default:
txtOrientation.Text = "Unknown orientation";
break;
}
});
}
public MainPage()
{
this.InitializeComponent();
_simpleorientation = SimpleOrientationSensor.GetDefault();
// Assign an event handler for the sensor orientation-changed event
if (_simpleorientation != null)
{
_simpleorientation.OrientationChanged += new TypedEventHandler<SimpleOrientationSensor, SimpleOrientationSensorOrientationChangedEventArgs>(OrientationChanged);
}
}
}
}
You'll need to rename the namespace in the previous snippet with the name you gave your project. For example, if you created a project named SimpleOrientationCS, you'd replace namespace App1
with namespace SimpleOrientationCS
.
4. Replace the XAML code
Open the file MainPage.xaml and replace the original contents with the following XML.
<Page
x:Class="App1.MainPage"
xmlns="https://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"
xmlns:x="https://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml"
xmlns:local="using:App1"
xmlns:d="https://schemas.microsoft.com/expression/blend/2008"
xmlns:mc="https://schemas.openxmlformats.org/markup-compatibility/2006"
mc:Ignorable="d">
<Grid x:Name="LayoutRoot" Background="#FF0C0C0C">
<TextBlock HorizontalAlignment="Left" Height="24" Margin="8,8,0,0" TextWrapping="Wrap" Text="Current Orientation:" VerticalAlignment="Top" Width="101" Foreground="#FFF8F7F7"/>
<TextBlock x:Name="txtOrientation" HorizontalAlignment="Left" Height="24" Margin="118,8,0,0" TextWrapping="Wrap" Text="TextBlock" VerticalAlignment="Top" Width="175" Foreground="#FFFEFAFA"/>
</Grid>
</Page>
You'll need to replace the first part of the class name in the previous snippet with the namespace of your app. For example, if you created a project named SimpleOrientationCS, you'd replace x:Class="App1.MainPage"
with x:Class="SimpleOrientationCS.MainPage"
. You should also replace xmlns:local="using:App1"
with xmlns:local="using:SimpleOrientationCS"
.
5. Build, deploy and run the app
Press F5 or select Debug > Start Debugging to build, deploy, and run the app.
Once the app is running, you can change the accelerometer values by moving the device or using the emulator tools.
6. Stop the app
- Press ALT+Tab to return to Visual Studio.
- Press Shift+F5 or select Debug > Stop Debugging to stop the app.
Summary
The previous example demonstrates how little code you'll need to write in order to integrate simple-orientation sensor input in your app.
The app establishes a connection with the default sensor in the MainPage method.
_simpleorientation = SimpleOrientationSensor.GetDefault();
The new sensor data is captured in the OrientationChanged method. Each time the sensor driver receives new data from the sensor, it passes the values to your app using this event handler. The app registers this event handler on the following line.
_simpleorientation.OrientationChanged += new TypedEventHandler<SimpleOrientationSensor,
SimpleOrientationSensorOrientationChangedEventArgs>(OrientationChanged);
These new values are written to a TextBlock found in the project's XAML.
<TextBlock HorizontalAlignment="Left" Height="24" Margin="8,8,0,0" TextWrapping="Wrap" Text="Current Orientation:" VerticalAlignment="Top" Width="101" Foreground="#FFF8F7F7"/>
<TextBlock x:Name="txtOrientation" HorizontalAlignment="Left" Height="24" Margin="118,8,0,0" TextWrapping="Wrap" Text="TextBlock" VerticalAlignment="Top" Width="175" Foreground="#FFFEFAFA"/>
Related topics
SimpleOrientation Sensor class