When the value of an element changes, a ChangeEvent
is sent. This is typically sent when a value in a field of a control changes. For example, when the user toggles a checkbox.
The ChangeEvent
is a typed event, and contains both the previous and the new value of the visual element.
The event triggers after a change assigns a new value to a visual element. You can’t cancel change events to prevent a value change on a visual element.
The base class for ChangeEvent
is the EventBase class.
Event | Description | Trickles down | Bubbles up | Cancellable |
---|---|---|---|---|
ChangeEvent | A generic event sent when the value of an element changes. | ✔ | ✔ |
previousValue
: The previous value of the target control.
newValue
: The new value of the target control.
ChangeEvent
is a notification event that allows you to react to the value change of a visual element. For example, when you toggle a checkbox to mute music in a game, the game should stop all music.
This event applies to all controls that implement the INotifyValueChanged<T>
, where <T>
is the type of the ChangeEvent
. This event is also used internally to update properties within objects linked to the UI via Bindings.
It fires even when the value of a control is set by code. You can modify the value on a control without firing the ChangeEvent
by calling SetValueWithoutNotify
in the INotifyValueChange<T>
interface.
You can register a callback function to receive a ChangeEvent
in two ways:
RegisterCallback<>()
on an visual elementRegisterValueChangedCallback()
on a visual element deriving from INotifyValueChange<T>
Registering a callback via RegisterCallback works on all visual elements, regardless of whether they store internal values or not. If you want to listen to any changes that happen in the child controls of a parent element, this is the method to use.
Because ChangeEvent
is a typed event, you must specify the type when registering the event. The code below demonstrates registering and receiving a ChangeEvent
of the type bool
.
// Registering the callback
rootVisualElement.RegisterCallback<ChangeEvent<bool>>(OnBoolChangedEvent);
// Event callback
private void OnBoolChangedEvent(ChangeEvent<bool> evt)
{
// Handling code
}
Elements that hold values, such as toggles and integer fields, implement the INotifyValueChange<T>
interface. It’s possible to register a callback on these elements directly, by calling RegisterValueChangedCallback. This is a more convenient way to register a callback because the type is already built-in. You can unregister event handlers again by calling myElement.UnregisterValueChangedCallback
.
var newToggle = new Toggle("Test Toggle");
newToggle.RegisterValueChangedCallback(OnTestToggleChanged);
private void OnTestToggleChanged(ChangeEvent<bool> evt)
{
// Handling code
}
target
: The element where the change of state occurs.
The following examples demonstrate the usage of ChangeEvent
and how to set and get a control value.
To view an example, do the following:
using UnityEditor;
using UnityEngine;
using UnityEngine.UIElements;
public class ChangeEventTestWindow : EditorWindow
{
private Toggle m_MyToggle;
[MenuItem("Window/UI Toolkit/Change Event Test Window")]
public static void ShowExample()
{
ChangeEventTestWindow wnd = GetWindow<ChangeEventTestWindow>();
wnd.titleContent = new GUIContent("Change Event Test Window");
}
public void CreateGUI()
{
// Create a toggle
m_MyToggle = new Toggle("Test Toggle") { name = "My Toggle" };
rootVisualElement.Add(m_MyToggle);
// Register a callback on the toggle
m_MyToggle.RegisterValueChangedCallback(OnTestToggleChanged);
// Register a callback on the parent
rootVisualElement.RegisterCallback<ChangeEvent<bool>>(OnBoolChangedEvent);
}
private void OnBoolChangedEvent(ChangeEvent<bool> evt)
{
Debug.Log($"Toggle changed. Old value: {evt.previousValue}, new value: {evt.newValue}");
}
private void OnTestToggleChanged(ChangeEvent<bool> evt)
{
Debug.Log($"A bool value changed. Old value: {evt.previousValue}, new value: {evt.newValue}");
}
}
using UnityEditor;
using UnityEngine;
using UnityEngine.UIElements;
public class ChangeEventTestWindow : EditorWindow
{
private Toggle m_MyToggle;
[MenuItem("Window/UI Toolkit/Change Event Test Window")]
public static void ShowExample()
{
GetWindow<ChangeEventTestWindow>().titleContent = new GUIContent("Change Event Test Window");
}
public void CreateGUI()
{
// Create a toggle and register callback
m_MyToggle = new Toggle("Test Toggle") { name = "My Toggle" };
m_MyToggle.RegisterValueChangedCallback((evt) => { Debug.Log("Change Event received"); });
rootVisualElement.Add(m_MyToggle);
// Create button to toggle the toggle's value
Button button01 = new Button() { text = "Toggle" };
button01.clicked += () =>
{
m_MyToggle.value = !m_MyToggle.value;
};
rootVisualElement.Add(button01);
// Create button to toggle the toggle's value without triggering a ChangeEvent
Button button02 = new Button() { text = "Toggle without notification" };
button02.clicked += () =>
{
m_MyToggle.SetValueWithoutNotify(!m_MyToggle.value);
};
rootVisualElement.Add(button02);
}
}