2
I’m using the following code:
string numero = "";
private void MaskeditCPF(TextBox txt, KeyEventArgs e)
{
    //Verifica de a tecla digitada foi algo diferente de números ou BackSpace
    if (e.Key != Key.Back && (e.Key < Key.D0 || e.Key > Key.D9))
    {
        e.Handled = true;
    }
    else
    {
        if (e.Key == Key.Back && numero.Length > 0) //Se digitou BackSpace então retiramos o último número digitado
            numero = numero.Substring(0, numero.Length - 1);
        else
            numero += Convert.ToChar(e.PlatformKeyCode).ToString(); //Concatenamos o número digitado aos já existentes
        //Verificações para realizar o maskedit em C#. Nesse caso o formato são números com 2 casas decimais
        if (numero.Length == 0)
            txt.Text = "";
        else if (numero.Length < 2)
            txt.Text = "0-0" + numero;
        else if (numero.Length == 2)
            txt.Text = "0-" + numero;
        else
            txt.Text = numero.Substring(0, numero.Length - 2) + "-" + numero.Substring(numero.Length - 2, 2);
    }
}
private void cpf_KeyDown(object sender, KeyEventArgs e)
{
    MaskeditCPF(cpf, e);
}
I found it on a blog and changed, but I do not know how to turn it into CPF mask, just as it is the textbox gets: 123456789-01 how do I get 123.456.789-01?
I don’t know anything about Windows Fone, but Jquery works on it?
– Marconi
He’s working on windows-phone in c# isn’t that right? I don’t think javascript-jquery would apply to that.
– William Pereira
Jquery works, but in another type of application, Javascript applications (which do not have as many features as C#applications), here’s the problem, C# for Windows Phone has no method for masking, the code I used was created from scratch to serve as a mask. But I got lost when it came to putting the stitches in the mask, because it’s a handwritten calculation with the
.Length– Leonardo
I’m sorry, I didn’t see it was Wphone.
– pnet