View data persistence preserves the view data associated with visual elementsA node of a visual tree that instantiates or derives from the C# VisualElement
class. You can style the look, define the behaviour, and display it on screen as part of the UI. More info
See in Glossary in the UI. View data refers to the state of the user interface that’s not part of the underlying data model of the UI. For example, view data could include the scroll position of a scroll bar or the selection of a list.
View data persistence addresses the issue of UI view data not persisting during certain events in the Editor:
Note: View data persistence only works in the Editor UI.
To enable view data persistence for the elements that support it, set the view data key to a unique string within the Editor window (the EditorWindow
type). You can set it in UI Builder, UXML, or C#:
view-data-key
attribute.viewDataKey
property.The following elements currently support view data persistence:
When you enable the view data persistence, those elements remember their internal view state:
To enable view data persistence for a read-only element, set the view data key on the parent element.
For example, a ScrollView has several read-only Scroller child elements. Each Scroller is given a view data key that’s unique within the ScrollView element. If you set a view data key for the Foldout, the Foldout has its view data persisted. Although Scrollers have keys, their view data isn’t persisted. You must set a view data key for their parent ScrollView to enable persistence. The Scrollers will combine their view data keys with the parent’s view data key to create a unique global view data key.
Note: Currently, the API necessary to add support for view data persistence is internal, which means you can’t enable view data persistence for your custom controls.