24

In my C# standalone application, I want to let users click on a link that would launch their favorite browser.

System.Windows.Controls.TextBlock text = new TextBlock();
Run run = new Run("Link Text");

Hyperlink link = new Hyperlink(run);
link.NavigateUri = new Uri("http://w3.org");
text.Inlines.Add(link);

The link is displayed correctly.

When I move the mouse over it, the link becomes red.

PROBLEM: When I click it, nothing happens.

Did I forget something? Do I need to implement some kind of method to really let the link be opened?

Nicolas Raoul
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5 Answers5

33

You need to handle the hyperlink's RequestNavigate event. Here's a quick way of doing it:

link.RequestNavigate += (sender, e) =>
{
    System.Diagnostics.Process.Start(e.Uri.ToString());
};
markmuetz
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6

Are you handling the 'Hyperlink.RequestNavigate' event? When a user clicks a Hyperlink in a WPF window it doesn't automatically open a browser with the URI specified in its NavigateUri property.

In your code-behind you can do something like:

link.RequestNavigate += LinkOnRequestNavigate;

private void LinkOnRequestNavigate(object sender, RequestNavigateEventArgs e)
{
    System.Diagnostics.Process.Start(e.Uri.ToString());
}
Simon Brydon
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    WPF Hyperlink is nearly useless. I want it to launch the URL using url set in xaml, otherwise why don't I just use a label and button with my view viewmodel. – Gary Kindel Jan 22 '19 at 19:58
2

You can make a global hyperlink handler in your App.xaml.cs

protected override void OnStartup(StartupEventArgs e) {
    EventManager.RegisterClassHandler(
        typeof(System.Windows.Documents.Hyperlink),
        System.Windows.Documents.Hyperlink.RequestNavigateEvent,
        new System.Windows.Navigation.RequestNavigateEventHandler(
            (sender, en) => Process.Start(new ProcessStartInfo(
                en.Uri.ToString()
            ) { UseShellExecute = true })
        )
    );
    base.OnStartup(e);
}

This assumes all the NavigateUri properties refer to something you want to launch, but you can always make the handler take care of edge cases.

Patrick
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1

For those in .Net Core, the way you do this has changed. Based on this answer and this.

link.RequestNavigate += (sender, e) =>
{
    var url = e.Uri.ToString();
    Process.Start(new ProcessStartInfo(url)
    { 
        UseShellExecute = true 
    });
};
Kao
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0

Working with a command is also possible:

<TextBlock>
    See our <Hyperlink NavigateUri="https://www.example.com" Command="{Binding OpenPrivacyPolicyCommand}">Privacy Policy</Hyperlink>
</TextBlock>

The command needs to call open the URL then:

Process.Start(url);
ndsvw
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