mvvm-toolkit-messenger
CommunityToolkit.Mvvm Messenger pub/sub for decoupled communication between ViewModels (or any objects). Covers WeakReferenceMessenger vs StrongReferenceMessenger, IRecipient<TMessage>, RequestMessage<T> / AsyncRequestMessage<T> / CollectionRequestMessage<T>, ValueChangedMessage<T>, channels (tokens), and the ObservableRecipient activation lifecycle. Use across WPF, WinUI 3, .NET MAUI, Uno, and Avalonia.
What this skill does
# CommunityToolkit.Mvvm Messenger
Pub/sub messaging for ViewModels (or any objects) without forcing a shared
reference graph. Part of `CommunityToolkit.Mvvm` 8.x.
> **TL;DR.** Default to `WeakReferenceMessenger.Default`. Register handlers
> with the `(recipient, message)` lambda and the `static` modifier so you
> never capture `this`. Inherit from `ObservableRecipient` and toggle
> `IsActive` at activation/deactivation to get automatic register/unregister.
---
## When to use this skill
- Two or more ViewModels need to react to an event (login, theme change,
save, navigation) without holding references to each other
- A ViewModel needs to ask another VM for a value (request/reply)
- You're scoping events to a sub-system or window with channel tokens
- Diagnosing "my handler never fires" or weak-reference recipient lifetime
problems
For source generators, base classes, and commands see the **`mvvm-toolkit`**
skill. For DI wiring (registering an `IMessenger` instance), see
**`mvvm-toolkit-di`**.
---
## Choose an implementation
| Type | When |
|------|------|
| `WeakReferenceMessenger.Default` | **Default.** Recipients held weakly — eligible for GC even while registered. Internal trimming runs during full GCs; no manual `Cleanup()` needed. |
| `StrongReferenceMessenger.Default` | Profiler shows the messenger is hot and allocation matters. Recipients are pinned until you `Unregister`. Forgetting unregistration leaks them. |
| Custom `IMessenger` instance | Per-window/per-scope (e.g., one messenger per app window). Construct directly, inject via DI. |
`ObservableRecipient`'s parameterless constructor uses
`WeakReferenceMessenger.Default`. Pass a different `IMessenger` to its
constructor to override.
---
## Define a message
The toolkit ships base classes; any class works.
```csharp
using CommunityToolkit.Mvvm.Messaging.Messages;
// Single-payload broadcast
public sealed class LoggedInUserChangedMessage(User user)
: ValueChangedMessage<User>(user);
// Custom shape (records are great for this)
public sealed record ThemeChangedMessage(AppTheme NewTheme);
// Empty signal
public sealed record RefreshRequestedMessage;
```
---
## Register a recipient
### Lambda style (recommended)
```csharp
WeakReferenceMessenger.Default.Register<MyViewModel, ThemeChangedMessage>(
this,
static (recipient, message) => recipient.OnThemeChanged(message.NewTheme));
```
The `static` modifier prevents accidental closure allocation and keeps
`this` out of the lambda — use the `recipient` parameter instead.
### `IRecipient<TMessage>` interface style
```csharp
public sealed class MyViewModel : ObservableRecipient,
IRecipient<ThemeChangedMessage>,
IRecipient<RefreshRequestedMessage>
{
public void Receive(ThemeChangedMessage message) { /* ... */ }
public void Receive(RefreshRequestedMessage message) { /* ... */ }
}
```
`ObservableRecipient.OnActivated()` calls `Messenger.RegisterAll(this)`,
which subscribes every `IRecipient<T>` interface implemented by the type.
If you're not using `ObservableRecipient`, register manually:
```csharp
WeakReferenceMessenger.Default.RegisterAll(this);
```
---
## Send a message
```csharp
WeakReferenceMessenger.Default.Send(new ThemeChangedMessage(AppTheme.Dark));
// Empty payloads use the parameterless overload:
WeakReferenceMessenger.Default.Send<RefreshRequestedMessage>();
```
---
## Channels (tokens)
Scope messages to a sub-system or window with a token (any equatable
value — `int`, `string`, `Guid`):
```csharp
const int LeftPaneChannel = 1;
WeakReferenceMessenger.Default.Register<MyViewModel, RefreshRequestedMessage, int>(
this, LeftPaneChannel,
static (r, _) => r.RefreshLeft());
WeakReferenceMessenger.Default.Send(new RefreshRequestedMessage(), LeftPaneChannel);
```
Messages sent without a token use the default shared channel — they are
**not** delivered to channel-scoped recipients.
---
## Request / reply
For ask-style scenarios where a recipient provides a value back to the
sender, use the `RequestMessage<T>` family.
### Sync request
```csharp
public sealed class CurrentUserRequest : RequestMessage<User> { }
WeakReferenceMessenger.Default.Register<UserService, CurrentUserRequest>(
this,
static (r, m) => m.Reply(r.CurrentUser));
User user = WeakReferenceMessenger.Default.Send<CurrentUserRequest>();
```
The implicit conversion from `CurrentUserRequest` to `User` throws if no
recipient called `Reply`. Capture the message to check first:
```csharp
var request = WeakReferenceMessenger.Default.Send<CurrentUserRequest>();
if (request.HasReceivedResponse)
User user = request.Response;
```
### Async request
```csharp
public sealed class CurrentUserRequest : AsyncRequestMessage<User> { }
WeakReferenceMessenger.Default.Register<UserService, CurrentUserRequest>(
this,
static (r, m) => m.Reply(r.GetCurrentUserAsync()));
User user = await WeakReferenceMessenger.Default.Send<CurrentUserRequest>();
```
### Collection requests (fan-in)
`CollectionRequestMessage<T>` and `AsyncCollectionRequestMessage<T>` collect
a `Reply` from every responding recipient:
```csharp
public sealed class OpenDocumentsRequest : CollectionRequestMessage<Document> { }
var docs = WeakReferenceMessenger.Default.Send<OpenDocumentsRequest>();
foreach (Document doc in docs) { /* ... */ }
```
---
## Lifecycle
Even with `WeakReferenceMessenger`, unregister explicitly when a recipient
is being torn down — it trims dead entries and improves performance:
```csharp
WeakReferenceMessenger.Default.Unregister<ThemeChangedMessage>(this);
WeakReferenceMessenger.Default.Unregister<ThemeChangedMessage, int>(this, LeftPaneChannel);
WeakReferenceMessenger.Default.UnregisterAll(this);
```
`ObservableRecipient.OnDeactivated()` does this automatically when
`IsActive` flips to `false`. Set it from your activation hook:
```csharp
protected override void OnNavigatedTo(NavigationEventArgs e)
{
base.OnNavigatedTo(e);
ViewModel.IsActive = true;
}
protected override void OnNavigatedFrom(NavigationEventArgs e)
{
ViewModel.IsActive = false;
base.OnNavigatedFrom(e);
}
```
---
## Common pitfalls
1. **Capturing `this` in the lambda.** `(r, m) => OnX(m)` implicitly
captures `this`; allocates a closure and confuses lifetime. Always use
`(r, m) => r.OnX(m)` with `static`.
2. **Strong-ref recipients without `Unregister`.** With
`StrongReferenceMessenger`, recipients (and their entire object graph)
stay pinned forever. Either inherit from `ObservableRecipient`
(auto-unregisters in `OnDeactivated`) or call `UnregisterAll(this)`.
3. **Inherited message types.** A handler registered for `BaseMessage` is
**not** invoked for `DerivedMessage : BaseMessage`. Register each
concrete type.
4. **Wrong messenger instance.** Sending via `WeakReferenceMessenger.Default`
and registering via an injected per-window messenger means the message
never arrives. Use the same `IMessenger` everywhere (typically inject
it via `ObservableRecipient(messenger)`).
5. **`OnActivated` never runs.** `ObservableRecipient` only registers
`IRecipient<T>` handlers when `IsActive` flips from `false` to `true`.
6. **Cross-thread updates.** The messenger is thread-agnostic. If a
handler updates UI, marshal manually
(`DispatcherQueue.TryEnqueue` / `Dispatcher.BeginInvoke`).
---
## Multiple messengers (per-window scoping)
```csharp
services.AddSingleton<IMessenger>(WeakReferenceMessenger.Default); // app-wide
services.AddScoped<WindowScopedMessenger>(); // per-window
```
Inject the appropriate `IMessenger` into the ViewModel constructor:
```csharp
public sealed partial class WindowViewModel(IMessenger messenger)
: ObservableRecipient(messenger) { }
```
This isolates broadcasts to a single window — useful for multi-window
desktop apps (WinUI 3, WPF, MAUI desktop, Avalonia).
---
## References
| Topic | File |
|-------|------|
| Full deep dive (more channel/lifecycRelated in General
modeling-omnistudio-epc-catalog
IncludedSalesforce Industries CME EPC product-modeling skill for Product2-based catalog creation. Use when creating EPC products, configuring product attributes, building offer bundles with Product Child Items, or reviewing EPC DataPack JSON metadata for product catalog changes. TRIGGER when: user creates or updates Product2 EPC records, AttributeAssignment payloads, AttributeMetadata/AttributeDefaultValues, Offer bundles, or ProductChildItem relationships. DO NOT TRIGGER when: designing OmniScripts/FlexCards/Integration Procedures (use building-omnistudio-omniscript, building-omnistudio-flexcard, or building-omnistudio-integration-procedure), implementing Apex business logic (use generating-apex), or troubleshooting deployment pipelines (use deploying-metadata).
relationship-science-coach
IncludedUse this skill for direct, practical adult relationship coaching: couples conflict, repair, trust, marriage, dating, flirting, attachment patterns, emotional connection, sex, desire differences, eroticism, kink negotiation, affection, love languages, breakups, and long-term passion. Draw on Gottman, EFT and Hold Me Tight, attachment science, modern sex research, Perel, Nagoski, Kerner, Schnarch, Love and Stosny, and flexible love-language tools. Be concrete and low-hedge. Redirect only for imminent danger, abuse, coercive control, minors, non-consent, self-harm, stalking, or medical/legal/psychiatric decisions.
building-sf-integrations
IncludedSalesforce integration architecture and runtime plumbing with 120-point scoring. Use this skill to set up Named Credentials, External Credentials, External Services, REST/SOAP callout patterns, Platform Events, and Change Data Capture. TRIGGER when: user sets up Named Credentials, External Services, REST/SOAP callouts, Platform Events, CDC, or touches .namedCredential-meta.xml files. DO NOT TRIGGER when: Connected App/OAuth config (use configuring-connected-apps), Apex-only logic (use generating-apex), or data import/export (use handling-sf-data).
venue-templates
IncludedAccess comprehensive LaTeX templates, formatting requirements, and submission guidelines for major scientific publication venues (Nature, Science, PLOS, IEEE, ACM), academic conferences (NeurIPS, ICML, CVPR, CHI), research posters, and grant proposals (NSF, NIH, DOE, DARPA). This skill should be used when preparing manuscripts for journal submission, conference papers, research posters, or grant proposals and need venue-specific formatting requirements and templates.
let-fate-decide
IncludedDraws the 12 Houses of the Zodiac Tarot spread to inject entropy into planning when prompts are vague, ambiguous, or casually delegated. Interprets the spread to guide next steps. Use when the user says 'let fate decide', 'YOLO', 'whatever', 'idk', or other nonchalant phrases, makes Yu-Gi-Oh references, or when you are about to arbitrarily pick between multiple reasonable approaches. Prefer over ask-questions-if-underspecified when the user's tone is casual or playful rather than precision-seeking.
net-ops
IncludedCross-platform network troubleshooting (Windows, macOS, Linux) via local or remote shell. Use for: DNS broken, can't resolve hostnames, nslookup/dig works but apps fail, NRPT, WFP, scutil, /etc/resolver, systemd-resolved, /etc/resolv.conf, NetworkManager, VPN DNS leak residue (ProtonVPN/Mullvad/WireGuard/AnyConnect), AV/firewall blocking DNS or DoH, Tailscale DNS interaction, intermittent connectivity, remote diagnostics over SSH.