Just specifying DataTemplates
in the Resources
with the respective DataType
is enough, e.g.
<ListView ItemsSource="{Binding Data}">
<ListView.Resources>
<!-- Do NOT set the x:Key -->
<DataTemplate DataType="{x:Type local:Employee}">
<TextBlock Text="{Binding Name}" Foreground="Blue"/>
</DataTemplate>
<DataTemplate DataType="{x:Type local:Machine}">
<TextBlock Text="{Binding Model}" Foreground="Red"/>
</DataTemplate>
</ListView.Resources>
</ListView>
(Note that DataTemplate.DataType
can also be used for implicit XML data templating (see docs), the property type for that reason is not System.Type
, so unlike in Style.TargetType
you have to use x:Type
to reference a CLR-type. If you just enter a string it will not be converted to a type.)
You might also want to look into CompositeCollections
, to get clean merged lists of varying types.
Sample data i used:
ObservableCollection<Employee> data = new ObservableCollection<Employee>(new Employee[]
{
new Employee("Hans", "Programmer") ,
new Employee("Elister", "Programmer") ,
new Employee("Steve", "GUI Designer") ,
new Employee("Stephen", "GUI Designer") ,
new Employee("Joe", "Coffee Getter") ,
new Employee("Julien", "Programmer") ,
new Employee("John", "Coffee Getter") ,
});
ObservableCollection<Machine> data2 = new ObservableCollection<Machine>(new Machine[]
{
new Machine("XI2", String.Empty),
new Machine("MK2-xx", String.Empty),
new Machine("A2-B16", String.Empty),
});
CompositeCollection cc1 = new CompositeCollection();
cc1.Add(new CollectionContainer() { Collection = data });
cc1.Add(new CollectionContainer() { Collection = data2 });
Data = cc1;
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