When you define a column in a WPF grid you can set the width to one of three possible values:
- A fixed width,
Auto
– column will become as wide as necessary to fit its children, or
*
(star) take up any available remaining space
The *
is prefixed by a number (default is 1 if no number is specified). The available space is divided among the starred columns in proportion to the prefix number.
If you have this definition
<Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<ColumnDefinition Width="0.07*"/>
<ColumnDefinition Width="0.93*"/>
</Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
The first column will get 7% of the total space available and the second column would get 93%. On the other hand if you had this definition:
<Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<ColumnDefinition Width="0.07*"/>
<ColumnDefinition Width="0.14*"/>
</Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
The first column would get 1/3 and the second 2/3 of the available space.
In your specific case where the width of the grid is 354 and the proportions of the two columns are 40 and 314 you get the following column widths:
First column width = 40/(40 + 314)*354 = 40
Second coulmn width = 314/(40 + 314)*354 = 314
The star width is best used when the width of the grid isn't fixed. When the grid is resized the columns will then scale proportionally as specified by the star widths. In your case the width of the grid is fixed and you could just as easily have used fixed width columns.
If you want a layout where the second column is double the width of the first and the third column is triple the width of the first you need this definition:
<Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<ColumnDefinition Width="*"/>
<ColumnDefinition Width="2*"/>
<ColumnDefinition Width="3*"/>
</Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
If the total width of the grid is 300 you get column widths 50, 100 and 150. If the total width of the grid is 600 you get column widths 100, 200 and 300. And so on.
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