WPF: How to style or disable the default ContextMenu of a TextBox

To style ContextMenu's for all TextBoxes, I would do something like the following:

First, in the resources section, add a ContextMenu which you plan to use as your standard ContextMenu in a textbox.
e.g.

<ContextMenu x:Key="TextBoxContextMenu" Background="White">
  <MenuItem Command="ApplicationCommands.Copy" />
  <MenuItem Command="ApplicationCommands.Cut" />
  <MenuItem Command="ApplicationCommands.Paste" />
</ContextMenu>

Secondly, create a style for your TextBoxes, which uses the context menu resource:

<Style TargetType="{x:Type TextBox}">
  <Setter Property="ContextMenu" Value="{StaticResource TextBoxContextMenu}" />
</Style>

Finally, use your text box as normal:

<TextBox />

If instead you want to apply this context menu to only some of your textboxes, do not create the style above, and add the following to your TextBox markup:

<TextBox ContextMenu="{StaticResource TextBoxContextMenu}" />

Hope this helps!


Due to a late bug report we discovered that we cannot use the ApplicationComands Cut Paste and Copy directly in a partial trusted application. Therefor, using these commands in any Commmand of your controls will do absolutely nothing when executed.

So in essence Brads answer was almost there, it sure looked the right way i.e. no black background, but did not fix the problem.

We decided to "remove" the menu based on Brads answer, like so:

<ContextMenu x:Key="TextBoxContextMenu" Width="0" Height="0" />

And use this empty context menu like so:

<Style TargetType="{x:Type TextBox}">
  <Setter Property="ContextMenu" Value="{StaticResource TextBoxContextMenu}" />
</Style>

Bizarre. ContextMenu="{x:Null}" doesn't do the trick.

This does, however:

<TextBox.ContextMenu>
    <ContextMenu Visibility="Collapsed">
    </ContextMenu>
</TextBox.ContextMenu>

Doesn't matter, if you do not provide a key, it will use the TargetType as key just the same way my example uses :)

Taken from MSDN on Style:

Setting the TargetType property to the TextBlock type without setting an x:Key implicitly sets the x:Key to {x:Type TextBlock}. This also means that if you > > give the above Style an x:Key value of anything other than {x:Type TextBlock}, the Style would not be applied to all TextBlock elements automatically. Instead, you need to apply the style to the TextBlock elements explicitly.

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.windows.style.targettype.aspx

Tags:

.Net 3.5

Wpf

Xaml