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VisualStateManager.GoToStateCore Method

Definition

When overridden in a derived class, transitions a control between states.

protected:
 virtual bool GoToStateCore(Control ^ control, FrameworkElement ^ templateRoot, Platform::String ^ stateName, VisualStateGroup ^ group, VisualState ^ state, bool useTransitions) = GoToStateCore;
bool GoToStateCore(Control const& control, FrameworkElement const& templateRoot, winrt::hstring const& stateName, VisualStateGroup const& group, VisualState const& state, bool const& useTransitions);
protected virtual bool GoToStateCore(Control control, FrameworkElement templateRoot, string stateName, VisualStateGroup group, VisualState state, bool useTransitions);
function goToStateCore(control, templateRoot, stateName, group, state, useTransitions)
Protected Overridable Function GoToStateCore (control As Control, templateRoot As FrameworkElement, stateName As String, group As VisualStateGroup, state As VisualState, useTransitions As Boolean) As Boolean

Parameters

control
Control

The control to transition between states.

templateRoot
FrameworkElement

The root element of the control's ControlTemplate.

stateName
String

Platform::String

winrt::hstring

The name of the state to transition to.

group
VisualStateGroup

The VisualStateGroup that the state belongs to.

state
VisualState

The representation of the state to transition to.

useTransitions
Boolean

bool

true to use a VisualTransition to transition between states; otherwise, false.

Returns

Boolean

bool

true if the control successfully transitions to the new state; otherwise, false.

Remarks

This API is part of the scenario of defining a custom VisualStateManager behavior. Overriding GoToStateCore changes the state behavior in your custom class behavior.

To reference your custom VisualStateManager class, set the value of the VisualStateManager.CustomVisualStateManager attached property within any control template where you want to use the custom VisualStateManager class behavior. You typically create an instance of the custom VisualStateManager class through default XAML construction in Application.Resources. Then the VisualStateManager.CustomVisualStateManager attached property is set using a {StaticResource} markup extension reference to the key of the custom VisualStateManager resource.

Notes to inheritors

When a consumer of your custom VisualStateManager class calls GoToState to change the visual state of a control, this is the default behavior you are overriding:+ If the VisualState as named by stateName has a Storyboard, the storyboard begins.

  • If the VisualState that the control was using prior to the newly requested state has a Storyboard, that storyboard stops. If a VisualState for stateName doesn't exist in the group, your implementation should return false.

If the control is already in the VisualState requested as stateName, your implementation should return true.

For more info on the default behavior, see GoToState.

Events for visual state changes

CurrentStateChanging fires when the control begins to transition states as requested by the GoToState call. If a VisualTransition is applied to the state change, this event occurs when the transition begins.

CurrentStateChanged fires after the control is in the state as requested by the GoToState call, just as the new Storyboard begins. No event is fired on the new storyboard's completion.

If a VisualTransition is not applied, CurrentStateChanging and CurrentStateChanged fire in quick succession, but are guaranteed in that order if both occur.

However, if a state change transition is interrupted by a new GoToState call, the CurrentStateChanged event is never raised for the first state transition. A new event series is fired for the next requested state change.

Overriding the behavior of RaiseCurrentStateChanged and RaiseCurrentStateChanging is optional: how and when the events are raised by the default implementation might be adequate for your custom class.

Applies to

See also