ContentElement.MouseLeftButtonDown Event
Definition
Important
Some information relates to prerelease product that may be substantially modified before it’s released. Microsoft makes no warranties, express or implied, with respect to the information provided here.
Occurs when the left mouse button is pressed while the mouse pointer is over this element.
public:
virtual event System::Windows::Input::MouseButtonEventHandler ^ MouseLeftButtonDown;
public event System.Windows.Input.MouseButtonEventHandler MouseLeftButtonDown;
member this.MouseLeftButtonDown : System.Windows.Input.MouseButtonEventHandler
Public Custom Event MouseLeftButtonDown As MouseButtonEventHandler
Event Type
Implements
Remarks
Although this Routed Events Overview seems to follow a bubbling route through an element tree, it actually is a direct routed event that is raised and reraised along the element tree by each ContentElement.
This event is one of several related events that report the mouse-button specifics of an underlying Mouse.MouseDown event, which is an attached event that is processed by each element along an event route.
The arguments of this event expose the arguments of the underlying Mouse.MouseDown event. If that event is marked as handled along the event route, the mouse-button specific events are still raised; however, handlers of the mouse-button specific events must be added by explicitly calling AddHandler, with the option to handle events that are already marked as handled, in order to be listeners to the event.
Conceptually, think of this event (and other mouse-button events on ContentElement) to be a mouse "service" (with the service definition provided by the Mouse class). The event adds the convenience of not needing to check the mouse button states (left-right, up-down) of the original mouse events in the event data. For more advanced scenarios, such as checking for states of non-standard buttons, you might need to use the APIs on the Mouse class rather than those on ContentElement.
Important
A few ContentElement derived classes that have control-like behavior, for example, Hyperlink, might have inherent class handling for mouse button events. The left mouse button down event is the most likely event to have class handling in a control. The class handling often marks the underlying Mouse class event as handled. Once the event is marked handled, other instance handlers that are attached to that element are not ordinarily raised. Any other class or instance handlers that are attached to elements in the bubbling direction towards the root in the UI tree are also not ordinarily raised.
You can resolve the issue that is outlined in the preceding Important and still receive MouseLeftButtonDown events for left mouse button down events on a derived class that has class handling by using either of these solutions:
Attach handlers for the PreviewMouseDown event, which is not marked as handled by the controls. Notice that because this is a preview event, the route starts at the root and tunnels down to the control.
Register a handler on the control procedurally by calling AddHandler and choosing the signature option that enables handlers to listen for events even if they are already marked as handled in the routed event data.
Routed Event Information
Identifier field | MouseLeftButtonDownEvent |
Routing strategy | Direct |
Delegate | MouseButtonEventHandler |
- Override OnMouseLeftButtonDown to implement class handling for this event in derived classes.