By default the ItemsSource
is of type IEnumerable
. You need to first cast to a type that has access to the CollectionChanged
event, then add a handler for that event.
((INotifyCollectionChanged)List1.ItemsSource).CollectionChanged +=
new NotifyCollectionChangedEventHandler(List1CollectionChanged);
public void List1CollectionChanged(Object sender, NotifyCollectionChangedEventArgs e)
{
// Your logic here
}
Note: I cast it to
INotifyCollectionChanged
in my example, but you can really cast it to any object that implements that. Though, as a best practice, you should cast to the most generic type that gives you access to the methods/properties/events you need. So, while you
can cast it to an
ObservableCollection
, you don't need to.
INotifyCollectionChanged
contains the event you need and if you ever decide to use some other type of collection that implements it, this will continue to work, whereas casting to an
ObservableCollection
means that if you one day decide that you're list is now of type
MyOwnTypeOfObservableCollectionNotDerivedFromObservableCollection
than this will break. ;)
P.S. This should go in the xaml code-behind.