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Xamarin.Forms ScrollView

Xamarin.Forms ScrollView

ScrollView is a layout that's capable of scrolling its content. The ScrollView class derives from the Layout class, and by default scrolls its content vertically. A ScrollView can only have a single child, although this can be other layouts.

Warning

ScrollView objects should not be nested. In addition, ScrollView objects should not be nested with other controls that provide scrolling, such as CollectionView, ListView, and WebView.

ScrollView defines the following properties:

These properties are backed by BindableProperty objects, with the exception of the Content property, which means that they can be targets of data bindings and styled.

The Content property is the ContentProperty of the ScrollView class, and therefore does not need to be explicitly set from XAML.

Tip

To obtain the best possible layout performance, follow the guidelines at Optimize layout performance.

ScrollView as a root layout

A ScrollView can only have a single child, which can be other layouts. It's therefore common for a ScrollView to be the root layout on a page. To scroll its child content, ScrollView computes the difference between the height of its content and its own height. That difference is the amount that the ScrollView can scroll its content.

A StackLayout will often be the child of a ScrollView. In this scenario, the ScrollView causes the StackLayout to be as tall as the sum of the heights of its children. Then the ScrollView can determine the amount that its content can be scrolled. For more information about the StackLayout, see Xamarin.Forms StackLayout.

Caution

In a vertical ScrollView, avoid setting the VerticalOptions property to Start, Center, or End. Doing so tells the ScrollView to be only as tall as it needs to be, which could be zero. While Xamarin.Forms protects against this eventuality, it's best to avoid code that suggests something you don't want to happen.

The following XAML example has a ScrollView as a root layout on a page:

<ContentPage xmlns="http://xamarin.com/schemas/2014/forms"
             xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2009/xaml"
             xmlns:local="clr-namespace:ScrollViewDemos"
             x:Class="ScrollViewDemos.Views.ColorListPage"
             Title="ScrollView demo">
    <ScrollView>
        <StackLayout BindableLayout.ItemsSource="{x:Static local:NamedColor.All}">
            <BindableLayout.ItemTemplate>
                <DataTemplate>
                    <StackLayout Orientation="Horizontal">
                        <BoxView Color="{Binding Color}"
                                 HeightRequest="32"
                                 WidthRequest="32"
                                 VerticalOptions="Center" />
                        <Label Text="{Binding FriendlyName}"
                               FontSize="24"
                               VerticalOptions="Center" />
                    </StackLayout>
                </DataTemplate>
            </BindableLayout.ItemTemplate>
        </StackLayout>
    </ScrollView>
</ContentPage>

In this example, the ScrollView has its content set to a StackLayout that uses a bindable layout to display the Color fields defined by Xamarin.Forms. By default, a ScrollView scrolls vertically, which reveals more content:

Screenshot of a root ScrollView layout

The equivalent C# code is:

public class ColorListPageCode : ContentPage
{
    public ColorListPageCode()
    {
        DataTemplate dataTemplate = new DataTemplate(() =>
        {
            BoxView boxView = new BoxView
            {
                HeightRequest = 32,
                WidthRequest = 32,
                VerticalOptions = LayoutOptions.Center
            };
            boxView.SetBinding(BoxView.ColorProperty, "Color");

            Label label = new Label
            {
                FontSize = 24,
                VerticalOptions = LayoutOptions.Center
            };
            label.SetBinding(Label.TextProperty, "FriendlyName");

            StackLayout horizontalStackLayout = new StackLayout
            {
                Orientation = StackOrientation.Horizontal,
                Children = { boxView, label }
            };
            return horizontalStackLayout;
        });

        StackLayout stackLayout = new StackLayout();
        BindableLayout.SetItemsSource(stackLayout, NamedColor.All);
        BindableLayout.SetItemTemplate(stackLayout, dataTemplate);

        ScrollView scrollView = new ScrollView { Content = stackLayout };

        Title = "ScrollView demo";
        Content = scrollView;
    }
}

For more information about bindable layouts, see Bindable Layouts in Xamarin.Forms.

ScrollView as a child layout

A ScrollView can be a child layout to a different parent layout.

A ScrollView will often be the child of a StackLayout. A ScrollView requires a specific height to compute the difference between the height of its content and its own height, with the difference being the amount that the ScrollView can scroll its content. When a ScrollView is the child of a StackLayout, it doesn't receive a specific height. The StackLayout wants the ScrollView to be as short as possible, which is either the height of the ScrollView contents or zero. To handle this scenario, the VerticalOptions property of the ScrollView should be set to FillAndExpand. This will cause the StackLayout to give the ScrollView all the extra space not required by the other children, and the ScrollView will then have a specific height.

The following XAML example has a ScrollView as a child layout to a StackLayout:

<ContentPage xmlns="http://xamarin.com/schemas/2014/forms"
             xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2009/xaml"
             x:Class="ScrollViewDemos.Views.BlackCatPage"
             Title="ScrollView as a child layout demo">
    <StackLayout Margin="20">
        <Label Text="THE BLACK CAT by Edgar Allan Poe"
               FontSize="Medium"
               FontAttributes="Bold"
               HorizontalOptions="Center" />
        <ScrollView VerticalOptions="FillAndExpand">
            <StackLayout>
                <Label Text="FOR the most wild, yet most homely narrative which I am about to pen, I neither expect nor solicit belief. Mad indeed would I be to expect it, in a case where my very senses reject their own evidence. Yet, mad am I not -- and very surely do I not dream. But to-morrow I die, and to-day I would unburthen my soul. My immediate purpose is to place before the world, plainly, succinctly, and without comment, a series of mere household events. In their consequences, these events have terrified -- have tortured -- have destroyed me. Yet I will not attempt to expound them. To me, they have presented little but Horror -- to many they will seem less terrible than barroques. Hereafter, perhaps, some intellect may be found which will reduce my phantasm to the common-place -- some intellect more calm, more logical, and far less excitable than my own, which will perceive, in the circumstances I detail with awe, nothing more than an ordinary succession of very natural causes and effects." />
                <!-- More Label objects go here -->
            </StackLayout>
        </ScrollView>
    </StackLayout>
</ContentPage>

In this example, there are two StackLayout objects. The first StackLayout is the root layout object, which has a Label object and a ScrollView as its children. The ScrollView has a StackLayout as its content, with the StackLayout containing multiple Label objects. This arrangement ensures that the first Label is always on-screen, while text displayed by the other Label objects can be scrolled:

Screenshot of a child ScrollView layout

The equivalent C# code is:

public class BlackCatPageCS : ContentPage
{
    public BlackCatPageCS()
    {
        Label titleLabel = new Label
        {
            Text = "THE BLACK CAT by Edgar Allan Poe",
            // More properties set here to define the Label appearance
        };

        ScrollView scrollView = new ScrollView
        {
            VerticalOptions = LayoutOptions.FillAndExpand,
            Content = new StackLayout
            {
                Children =
                {
                    new Label
                    {
                        Text = "FOR the most wild, yet most homely narrative which I am about to pen, I neither expect nor solicit belief. Mad indeed would I be to expect it, in a case where my very senses reject their own evidence. Yet, mad am I not -- and very surely do I not dream. But to-morrow I die, and to-day I would unburthen my soul. My immediate purpose is to place before the world, plainly, succinctly, and without comment, a series of mere household events. In their consequences, these events have terrified -- have tortured -- have destroyed me. Yet I will not attempt to expound them. To me, they have presented little but Horror -- to many they will seem less terrible than barroques. Hereafter, perhaps, some intellect may be found which will reduce my phantasm to the common-place -- some intellect more calm, more logical, and far less excitable than my own, which will perceive, in the circumstances I detail with awe, nothing more than an ordinary succession of very natural causes and effects.",
                    },
                    // More Label objects go here
                }
            }
        };

        Title = "ScrollView as a child layout demo";
        Content = new StackLayout
        {
            Margin = new Thickness(20),
            Children = { titleLabel, scrollView }
        };
    }
}

Orientation

ScrollView has an Orientation property, which represents the scrolling direction of the ScrollView. This property is of type ScrollOrientation, which defines the following members:

  • Vertical indicates that the ScrollView will scroll vertically. This member is the default value of the Orientation property.
  • Horizontal indicates that the ScrollView will scroll horizontally.
  • Both indicates that the ScrollView will scroll horizontally and vertically.
  • Neither indicates that the ScrollView won't scroll.

Tip

Scrolling can be disabled by setting the Orientation property to Neither.

Detect scrolling

ScrollView defines a Scrolled event that is fired to indicate that scrolling occurred. The ScrolledEventArgs object that accompanies the Scrolled event has ScrollX and ScrollY properties, both of type double.

Important

The ScrolledEventArgs.ScrollX and ScrolledEventArgs.ScrollY properties can have negative values, due to the bounce effect that occurs when scrolling back to the start of a ScrollView.

The following XAML example shows a ScrollView that sets an event handler for the Scrolled event:

<ScrollView Scrolled="OnScrollViewScrolled">
		...
</ScrollView>

The equivalent C# code is:

ScrollView scrollView = new ScrollView();
scrollView.Scrolled += OnScrollViewScrolled;

In this example, the OnScrollViewScrolled event handler is executed when the Scrolled event fires:

void OnScrollViewScrolled(object sender, ScrolledEventArgs e)
{
    Console.WriteLine($"ScrollX: {e.ScrollX}, ScrollY: {e.ScrollY}");
}

In this example, the OnScrollViewScrolled event handler outputs the values of the ScrolledEventArgs object that accompanies the event.

Note

The Scrolled event is fired for user initiated scrolls, and for programmatic scrolls.

Scroll programmatically

ScrollView defines two ScrollToAsync methods, that asynchronously scroll the ScrollView. One of the overloads scrolls to a specified position in the ScrollView, while the other scrolls a specified element into view. Both overloads have an additional argument that can be used to indicate whether to animate the scroll.

Important

The ScrollToAsync methods will not result in scrolling when the ScrollView.Orientation property is set to Neither.

Scroll a position into view

A position within a ScrollView can be scrolled to with the ScrollToAsync method that accepts double x and y arguments. Given a vertical ScrollView object named scrollView, the following example shows how to scroll to 150 device-independent units from the top of the ScrollView:

await scrollView.ScrollToAsync(0, 150, true);

The third argument to the ScrollToAsync is the animated argument, which determines whether a scrolling animation is displayed when programmatically scrolling a ScrollView.

Scroll an element into view

An element within a ScrollView can be scrolled into view with the ScrollToAsync method that accepts Element and ScrollToPosition arguments. Given a vertical ScrollView named scrollView, and a Label named label, the following example shows how to scroll an element into view:

await scrollView.ScrollToAsync(label, ScrollToPosition.End, true);

The third argument to the ScrollToAsync is the animated argument, which determines whether a scrolling animation is displayed when programmatically scrolling a ScrollView.

When scrolling an element into view, the exact position of the element after the scroll has completed can be set with the second argument, position, of the ScrollToAsync method. This argument accepts a ScrollToPosition enumeration member:

  • MakeVisible indicates that the element should be scrolled until it's visible in the ScrollView.
  • Start indicates that the element should be scrolled to the start of the ScrollView.
  • Center indicates that the element should be scrolled to the center of the ScrollView.
  • End indicates that the element should be scrolled to the end of the ScrollView.

Scroll bar visibility

ScrollView defines HorizontalScrollBarVisibility and VerticalScrollBarVisibility properties, which are backed by bindable properties. These properties get or set a ScrollBarVisibility enumeration value that represents whether the horizontal, or vertical, scroll bar is visible. The ScrollBarVisibility enumeration defines the following members:

  • Default indicates the default scroll bar behavior for the platform, and is the default value of the HorizontalScrollBarVisibility and VerticalScrollBarVisibility properties.
  • Always indicates that scroll bars will be visible, even when the content fits in the view.
  • Never indicates that scroll bars will not be visible, even if the content doesn't fit in the view.