Pass arguments
It's often necessary to instantiate objects with constructors that require arguments, or by calling a static creation method. This can be achieved in .NET Multi-platform App UI (.NET MAUI) XAML by using the x:Arguments
and x:FactoryMethod
attributes:
- The
x:Arguments
attribute is used to specify constructor arguments for a non-default constructor, or for a factory method object declaration. For more information, see Pass constructor arguments. - The
x:FactoryMethod
attribute is used to specify a factory method that can be used to initialize an object. For more information, see Call factory methods.
In addition, the x:TypeArguments
attribute can be used to specify the generic type arguments to the constructor of a generic type. For more information, see Specify a generic type argument.
Arguments can be passed to constructors and factory methods using the following .NET MAUI XAML language primitives:
x:Array
, which corresponds toArray
.x:Boolean
, which corresponds toBoolean
.x:Byte
, which corresponds toByte
.x:Char
, which corresponds toChar
.x:DateTime
, which corresponds toDateTime
.x:Decimal
, which corresponds toDecimal
.x:Double
, which corresponds toDouble
.x:Int16
, which corresponds toInt16
.x:Int32
, which corresponds toInt32
.x:Int64
, which corresponds toInt64
.x:Object
, which corresponds to theObject
.x:Single
, which corresponds toSingle
.x:String
, which corresponds toString
.x:TimeSpan
, which corresponds toTimeSpan
.
With the exception of x:DateTime
, the other language primitives are in the XAML 2009 specification.
Note
The x:Single
language primitive can be used to pass float
arguments.
Pass constructor arguments
Arguments can be passed to a non-default constructor using the x:Arguments
attribute. Each constructor argument must be delimited within an XML element that represents the type of the argument.
The following example demonstrates using the x:Arguments
attribute with three different Color constructors:
<BoxView HeightRequest="150"
WidthRequest="150"
HorizontalOptions="Center">
<BoxView.Color>
<Color>
<x:Arguments>
<x:Single>0.9</x:Single>
</x:Arguments>
</Color>
</BoxView.Color>
</BoxView>
<BoxView HeightRequest="150"
WidthRequest="150"
HorizontalOptions="Center">
<BoxView.Color>
<Color>
<x:Arguments>
<x:Single>0.25</x:Single>
<x:Single>0.5</x:Single>
<x:Single>0.75</x:Single>
</x:Arguments>
</Color>
</BoxView.Color>
</BoxView>
<BoxView HeightRequest="150"
WidthRequest="150"
HorizontalOptions="Center">
<BoxView.Color>
<Color>
<x:Arguments>
<x:Single>0.8</x:Single>
<x:Single>0.5</x:Single>
<x:Single>0.2</x:Single>
<x:Single>0.5</x:Single>
</x:Arguments>
</Color>
</BoxView.Color>
</BoxView>
The number of elements within the x:Arguments
tag, and the types of these elements, must match one of the Color constructors. The Color constructor with a single parameter requires a grayscale float
value from 0 (black) to 1 (white). The Color constructor with three parameters requires float
red, green, and blue values ranging from 0 to 1. The Color constructor with four parameters adds a float
alpha channel as the fourth parameter.
Call factory methods
Factory methods can be called in .NET MAUI XAML by specifying the method's name using the x:FactoryMethod
attribute, and its arguments using the x:Arguments
attribute. A factory method is a public static
method that returns objects or values of the same type as the class or structure that defines the methods.
The Color class defines a number of factory methods, and the following example demonstrates calling three of them:
<BoxView HeightRequest="150"
WidthRequest="150"
HorizontalOptions="Center">
<BoxView.Color>
<Color x:FactoryMethod="FromRgba">
<x:Arguments>
<x:Byte>192</x:Byte>
<x:Byte>75</x:Byte>
<x:Byte>150</x:Byte>
<x:Byte>128</x:Byte>
</x:Arguments>
</Color>
</BoxView.Color>
</BoxView>
<BoxView HeightRequest="150"
WidthRequest="150"
HorizontalOptions="Center">
<BoxView.Color>
<Color x:FactoryMethod="FromHsla">
<x:Arguments>
<x:Double>0.23</x:Double>
<x:Double>0.42</x:Double>
<x:Double>0.69</x:Double>
<x:Double>0.7</x:Double>
</x:Arguments>
</Color>
</BoxView.Color>
</BoxView>
<BoxView HeightRequest="150"
WidthRequest="150"
HorizontalOptions="Center">
<BoxView.Color>
<Color x:FactoryMethod="FromHex">
<x:Arguments>
<x:String>#FF048B9A</x:String>
</x:Arguments>
</Color>
</BoxView.Color>
</BoxView>
The number of elements within the x:Arguments
tag, and the types of these elements, must match the arguments of the factory method being called. The FromRgba
factory method requires four byte
arguments, which represent the red, green, blue, and alpha values, ranging from 0 to 255 respectively. The FromHsla
factory method requires four float
arguments, which represent the hue, saturation, luminosity, and alpha values, ranging from 0 to 1 respectively. The FromHex
factory method requires a string
argument that represents the hexadecimal (A)RGB color.
Specify a generic type argument
Generic type arguments for the constructor of a generic type can be specified using the x:TypeArguments
attribute, as demonstrated in the following example:
<StackLayout>
<StackLayout.Margin>
<OnPlatform x:TypeArguments="Thickness">
<On Platform="iOS" Value="0,20,0,0" />
<On Platform="Android" Value="5, 10" />
</OnPlatform>
</StackLayout.Margin>
</StackLayout>
The OnPlatform
class is a generic class and must be instantiated with an x:TypeArguments
attribute that matches the target type. In the On
class, the Platform
attribute can accept a single string
value, or multiple comma-delimited string
values. In this example, the StackLayout.Margin
property is set to a platform-specific Thickness
.
For more information about generic type arguments, see Generics in XAML.
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