TOC

The community is working on translating this tutorial into English, but it seems that no one has started the translation process for this article yet. If you can help us, then please click "More info".

Data binding:

Debugging data bindings

Since data bindings are evaluated at runtime, and no exceptions are thrown when they fail, a bad binding can sometimes be very hard to track down. These problems can occur in several different situations, but a common issue is when you try to bind to a property that doesn't exist, either because you remembered its name wrong or because you simply misspelled it. Here's an example:

<Window x:Class="WpfTutorialSamples.DataBinding.DataBindingDebuggingSample"
        xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"
        xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml"
        Title="DataBindingDebuggingSample" Height="100" Width="200">
    <Grid Margin="10" Name="pnlMain">
		<TextBlock Text="{Binding NonExistingProperty, ElementName=pnlMain}" />
	</Grid>
</Window>

The Output window

The first place you will want to look is the Visual Studio Output window. It should be at the bottom of your Visual Studio window, or you can activate it by using the [Ctrl+Alt+O] shortcut. There will be loads of output from the debugger, but somewhere you should find a line like this, when running the above example:

System.Windows.Data Error: 40 : BindingExpression path error: 'NonExistingProperty' property not found on 'object' ''Grid' (Name='pnlMain')'. BindingExpression:Path=NonExistingProperty; DataItem='Grid' (Name='pnlMain'); target element is 'TextBlock' (Name=''); target property is 'Text' (type 'String')

This might seem a bit overwhelming, mainly because no linebreaks are used in this long message, but the important part is this:

'NonExistingProperty' property not found on 'object' ''Grid' (Name='pnlMain')'.

It tells you that you have tried to use a property called "NonExistingProperty" on an object of the type Grid, with the name pnlMain. That's actually pretty concise and should help you correct the name of the property or bind to the real object, if that's the problem.

Adjusting the trace level

The above example was easy to fix, because it was clear to WPF what we were trying to do and why it didn't work. Consider this next example though:

<Window x:Class="WpfTutorialSamples.DataBinding.DataBindingDebuggingSample"
        xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"
        xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml"
        Title="DataBindingDebuggingSample" Height="100" Width="200">
    <Grid Margin="10">
		<TextBlock Text="{Binding Title}" />
	</Grid>
</Window>

I'm trying to bind to the property "Title", but on which object? As stated in the article on data contexts, WPF will use the DataContext property on the TextBlock here, which may be inherited down the control hierarchy, but in this example, I forgot to assign a data context. This basically means that I'm trying to get a property on a NULL object. WPF will gather that this might be a perfectly valid binding, but that the object just hasn't been initialized yet, and therefore it won't complain about it. If you run this example and look in the Output window, you won't see any binding errors.

However, for the cases where this is not the behavior that you're expecting, there is a way to force WPF into telling you about all the binding problems it runs into. It can be done by setting the TraceLevel on the PresentationTraceSources object, which can be found in the System.Diagnostics namespace:

<Window x:Class="WpfTutorialSamples.DataBinding.DataBindingDebuggingSample"
        xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"
        xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml"
        xmlns:diag="clr-namespace:System.Diagnostics;assembly=WindowsBase"
        Title="DataBindingDebuggingSample" Height="100" Width="200">
    <Grid Margin="10">
		<TextBlock Text="{Binding Title, diag:PresentationTraceSources.TraceLevel=High}" />
	</Grid>
</Window>

Notice that I have added a reference to the System.Diagnostics namespace in the top, and then used the property on the binding. WPF will now give you loads of information about this specific binding in the Output window:

System.Windows.Data Warning: 55 : Created BindingExpression (hash=2902278) for Binding (hash=52760599)
System.Windows.Data Warning: 57 :   Path: 'Title'
System.Windows.Data Warning: 59 : BindingExpression (hash=2902278): Default mode resolved to OneWay
System.Windows.Data Warning: 60 : BindingExpression (hash=2902278): Default update trigger resolved to PropertyChanged
System.Windows.Data Warning: 61 : BindingExpression (hash=2902278): Attach to System.Windows.Controls.TextBlock.Text (hash=18876224)
System.Windows.Data Warning: 66 : BindingExpression (hash=2902278): Resolving source
System.Windows.Data Warning: 69 : BindingExpression (hash=2902278): Found data context element: TextBlock (hash=18876224) (OK)
System.Windows.Data Warning: 70 : BindingExpression (hash=2902278): DataContext is null
System.Windows.Data Warning: 64 : BindingExpression (hash=2902278): Resolve source deferred
System.Windows.Data Warning: 66 : BindingExpression (hash=2902278): Resolving source
System.Windows.Data Warning: 69 : BindingExpression (hash=2902278): Found data context element: TextBlock (hash=18876224) (OK)
System.Windows.Data Warning: 70 : BindingExpression (hash=2902278): DataContext is null
System.Windows.Data Warning: 66 : BindingExpression (hash=2902278): Resolving source
System.Windows.Data Warning: 69 : BindingExpression (hash=2902278): Found data context element: TextBlock (hash=18876224) (OK)
System.Windows.Data Warning: 70 : BindingExpression (hash=2902278): DataContext is null
System.Windows.Data Warning: 66 : BindingExpression (hash=2902278): Resolving source
System.Windows.Data Warning: 69 : BindingExpression (hash=2902278): Found data context element: TextBlock (hash=18876224) (OK)
System.Windows.Data Warning: 70 : BindingExpression (hash=2902278): DataContext is null
System.Windows.Data Warning: 66 : BindingExpression (hash=2902278): Resolving source  (last chance)
System.Windows.Data Warning: 69 : BindingExpression (hash=2902278): Found data context element: TextBlock (hash=18876224) (OK)
System.Windows.Data Warning: 77 : BindingExpression (hash=2902278): Activate with root item <null>
System.Windows.Data Warning: 105 : BindingExpression (hash=2902278):   Item at level 0 is null - no accessor
System.Windows.Data Warning: 79 : BindingExpression (hash=2902278): TransferValue - got raw value {DependencyProperty.UnsetValue}
System.Windows.Data Warning: 87 : BindingExpression (hash=2902278): TransferValue - using fallback/default value ''
System.Windows.Data Warning: 88 : BindingExpression (hash=2902278): TransferValue - using final value ''

By reading through the list, you can actually see the entire process that WPF goes through to try to find a proper value for your TextBlock control. Several times you will see it being unable to find a proper DataContext, and in the end, it uses the default {DependencyProperty.UnsetValue} which translates into an empty string.

Using the real debugger

The above trick can be great for diagnosing a bad binding, but for some cases, it's easier and more pleasant to work with the real debugger. Bindings doesn't natively support this, since they are being handled deep inside of WPF, but using a Converter, like shown in a previous article, you can actually jump into this process and step through it. You don't really need a Converter that does anything useful, you just need a way into the binding process, and a dummy converter will get you there:

<Window x:Class="WpfTutorialSamples.DataBinding.DataBindingDebuggingSample"
        xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"
        xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml"
        xmlns:self="clr-namespace:WpfTutorialSamples.DataBinding"
        Title="DataBindingDebuggingSample" Name="wnd" Height="100" Width="200">
	<Window.Resources>
		<self:DebugDummyConverter x:Key="DebugDummyConverter" />
	</Window.Resources>
    <Grid Margin="10">
		<TextBlock Text="{Binding Title, ElementName=wnd, Converter={StaticResource DebugDummyConverter}}" />
	</Grid>
</Window>
using System;
using System.Windows;
using System.Windows.Data;
using System.Diagnostics;

namespace WpfTutorialSamples.DataBinding
{
	public partial class DataBindingDebuggingSample : Window
	{
		public DataBindingDebuggingSample()
		{
			InitializeComponent();
		}
	}

	public class DebugDummyConverter : IValueConverter
	{
		public object Convert(object value, Type targetType, object parameter, System.Globalization.CultureInfo culture)
		{
			Debugger.Break();
			return value;
		}

		public object ConvertBack(object value, Type targetType, object parameter, System.Globalization.CultureInfo culture)
		{
			Debugger.Break();
			return value;
		}
	}
}

In the Code-behind file, we define a DebugDummyConverter. In the Convert() and ConvertBack() methods, we call Debugger.Break(), which has the same effect as setting a breakpoint in Visual Studio, and then return the value that was given to us untouched.

In the markup, we add a reference to our converter in the window resources and then we use it in our binding. In a real world application, you should define the converter in a file of its own and then add the reference to it in App.xaml, so that you may use it all over the application without having to create a new reference to it in each window, but for this example, the above should do just fine.

If you run the example, you will see that the debugger breaks as soon as WPF tries to fetch the value for the title of the window. You can now inspect the values given to the Convert() method, or even change them before proceeding, using the standard debugging capabilities of Visual Studio.

If the debugger never breaks, it means that the converter is not used. This usually indicates that you have an invalid binding expression, which can be diagnosed and fixed using the methods described in the start of this article. The dummy-converter trick is only for testing valid binding expressions.


This article has been fully translated into the following languages: Is your preferred language not on the list? Click here to help us translate this article into your language!