[]
If the Child control is handed a specific TouchEvent and you do not want the parent control to get this event you can set the TouchRoutedEventArgs.Handled property to True to block its routed event.
[C#]
using C1.Win.TouchToolKit;
private void Form1_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
this.c1TouchEventProvider1.SetEnableTouchEvents(button1, true);
this.c1TouchEventProvider1.SetEnableTouchEvents(panel1, true);
this.c1TouchEventProvider1.Tapped += new EventHandler<TappedEventArgs>(c1TouchEventProvider1_Tapped);
}
private void c1TouchEventProvider1_Tapped(object sender, TappedEventArgs e)
{
if (e.TargetControl != null)
{
Console.WriteLine("{0},{1},{2}", DateTime.Now.ToString(), e.TargetControl.Name, e.OriginalSource.Name);
e.Handled = true;
}
}
[Visual Basic]
Imports C1.Win.TouchToolKit
Private Sub Form1_Load(sender As System.Object, e As System.EventArgs) Handles MyBase.Load
C1TouchEventProvider1.SetEnableTouchEvents(Button1, True)
C1TouchEventProvider1.SetEnableTouchEvents(Panel1, True)
End Sub
Private Sub C1TouchEventProvider1_Tapped(sender As System.Object, e As TappedEventArgs) Handles C1TouchEventProvider1.Tapped
If Not e.TargetControl Is Nothing Then
Console.WriteLine("{0},{1},{2}", DateTime.Now.ToString(), e.TargetControl.Name, e.OriginalSource.Name)
e.Handled = True
End If
End Sub