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Declarative based UI programming: WPF, Silverlight & Surface Tim Huckaby CEO, InterKnowlogy Microsoft RD & MVP.

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Presentation on theme: "Declarative based UI programming: WPF, Silverlight & Surface Tim Huckaby CEO, InterKnowlogy Microsoft RD & MVP."— Presentation transcript:

1 Declarative based UI programming: WPF, Silverlight & Surface Tim Huckaby CEO, InterKnowlogy Microsoft RD & MVP

2 About… InterKnowlogy (www.InterKnowlogy.com) Tim Huckaby, CEO (TimHuck@InterKnowlogy.com)TimHuck@InterKnowlogy.com ● Custom Application Development / Consulting / Software & Systems Engineering Firm headquartered in Carlsbad, CA ● Design, Architect, Build and Deploy Enterprise Class Applications ● Industry Experts: Most of the employees are published Microsoft.NET Application development since 2000! Microsoft.NET Smart Client pioneers / industry leaders Information Worker Solutions (VSTO & SharePoint) Integration / Messaging, B2B / B2C, Wireless / Mobility Leading Edge: Surface, WPF, Silverlight, SharePoint, OBA, Surface Cutting Edge Solutions on emerging Microsoft technologies Largest Client: Microsoft

3 Declarative Programming Layout and Controls Events and Commands Working with Data Session Agenda Styles

4 4 Reference Applications Demo Tim Huckaby CEO, InterKnowlogy Microsoft RD & MVP

5 Declarative Programming XAML replaces code Attributes control Layout and Style Event handlers wired-up in XAML Declarative Data Binding

6 Declarative Programming Gotcha(s) Not all XAML is created equal Silverlight was designed to be a small subset of WPF not a direct port Surface works with gestures so their versions of some controls are needed

7 7 Declarative Programming Demo Tim Huckaby CEO, InterKnowlogy Microsoft RD & MVP

8 Layout Overview Content rendering flows inside parent Fixed positioning (Canvas) is seldom used Panels are used to house content Margins and Padding over fixed size

9 Panels (ALL) StackPanel Arranges child elements into a single line that can be oriented horizontally or vertically. Grid A flexible grid area that consists of columns and rows. Canvas An area within which you can explicitly position child elements by using coordinates that are relative to the Canvas area.

10 Panels (WPF and Surface) WrapPanel Positions child elements in sequential position from left to right, breaking content to the next line at the edge of the containing box. DockPanel An area where you can arrange child elements either horizontally or vertically, relative to each other.

11 Positioning Horizontal and Vertical Alignment Margin Padding Margin Text Block Padding

12 12 Layout Demo Tim Huckaby CEO, InterKnowlogy Microsoft RD & MVP

13 Controls Overview Not all controls are created equal Silverlight is a subset of WPF so certain controls have not ported over yet Surface relies on touch so it has unique versions of some controls

14 Standard Common Controls TextBox Button CheckBox / ComboBox Image ListBox Tab

15 WPF Controls Menu and Toolbar TextBlock InkCanvas / InkPresenter Expander TreeView DocumentViewer UniformGrid

16 Silverlight Controls DataGrid Calendar ProgressBar

17 Surface Controls ScatterView Menu TagVisualizer InkCanvas

18 18 Controls Demo Tim Huckaby CEO, InterKnowlogy Microsoft RD & MVP

19 Events and Commands Standard.NET Events Routed Events * Commands * * Partial or no support in Silverlight

20 Routed Events Bubbling * ● Starts at the current element and bubbles up to the current element’s parent and that elements parent and so on [MouseLeftButtonDown] Tunneling * ● Works opposite of bubbling and starts at the root element and works down to the originating element [PreviewMouseLeftButtonDown] Direct ● Works like standard.NET event handling with only direct handlers being notified of events [Click] * Partial or no support in Silverlight

21 Commands Logical action that can be invoke in several ways Based on the RoutedCommand Class Uses both event tunneling [PreviewExecuteEvent] and event bubbling [ExecuteEvent] Not supported in Silverlight

22 22 Events and Commands Demo Tim Huckaby CEO, InterKnowlogy Microsoft RD & MVP

23 Working with Data Overview Simple Data Binding Complex Data Binding

24 Data Binding Overview Simple Field level Data Binding Complex Data Binding to multiple controls at a time (Master/Detail/Detail) Client-Side Sorting and Filtering Support for binding to Objects, XML and Relational data sources

25 Simple Data Binding Simple Data Binding using Business Objects Support for two-way synchronization in simple objects via the INotifyPropertyChanged interface Implicit and Declarative binding via the DataContext

26 Complex Data Binding Binding to Lists Supports two-way data binding to list if list inherits from ObservableCollection Data Templates Sorting Filtering Master/Detail/Detail

27 27 Working with Data Demo Tim Huckaby CEO, InterKnowlogy Microsoft RD & MVP

28 Adding Style to Your Application Overview Resources * Triggers * * Partial or no support in Silverlight

29 Styles Overview What are styles? Problems they address in WinForms 2.0 ● Styling controls one at a time ● Unnecessary Custom Control Creation Similarities to Cascading Style Sheets ● Inline declaration ● Page level declaration ● Separate file declaration

30 Style Examples

31 Resources Static Resources ● Loaded when Window or Page Loads ● Leads to slower page loading ● Changes to underlining values are not propagated Dynamic Resources * ● More overhead to allow for constant updates ● Can only be used to set dependency properties ● Can potentially improve Page and Window load time * Not supported in Silverlight

32 Resource Dictionary Contains hash table of resources Great way to organize resources Resource.MergedDictionaries combines many different file based resources * * Not supported in Silverlight

33 Triggers Setters that are set based on one or more conditions Three Types of Triggers ● Property – Invoked when the value of a dependency property changes ● Data – Invoked when the value of a plain.NET property changes ● Event – Invoked when a routed event changes Not supported in Silverlight

34 The Silverlight Visual State Manager Alternative to Triggers in Silverlight Promotes separation between UI and code Controls have States and State Groups States within a State Group are immutable Fully supported in Blend Not supported in WPF

35 35 Adding Style to Your Application Tim Huckaby CEO, InterKnowlogy Microsoft RD & MVP

36 Summary Layout in XAML is flexible Each technology has it’s own set of controls Data Binding is rich & supports many data types Styles bring life to your applications The learning curve can be steep, but is worth it. Download all my resources and dedicate some time to learn.

37 WPF: Where to go Next Free Resources WindowsClient.net - this is the official Microsoft community portal for WPF developmentWindowsClient.net http://silverlight.net - this is the official Microsoft community portal for Silverlight development http://www.microsoft.com/surface - this is the official Microsoft community portal for Surface

38 Where to go Next Books Windows Presentation Foundation Unleashed (WPF) by Adam Nathan, Daniel LehenbauerAdam NathanDaniel Lehenbauer Essential Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) by Chris AndersonChris Anderson Silverlight In Action by Chad Campbell and John Stockton

39 Where to go…soon… Windows Presentation Foundation A Scenario-Based Approach by Billy Hollis “Early April…I hope…” B. Hollis, 12/7/07 “October…” B. Hollis, 6/3/08 “It’s not going to be done in April.” B. Hollis, 2/24/09

40 Tim Huckaby, InterKnowlogy More info on InterKnowlogy: ● www.InterKnowlogy.com Contact me: Tim Huckaby ● E-mail: TimHuck@InterKnowlogy.com ● Phone: 760-444-8640 ● Blog: http://blogs.InterKnowlogy.com/TimHuckaby About Tim Huckaby ● CEO, InterKnowlogy ● Microsoft® Regional Director – Southern California ● Microsoft®.NET Partner Advisory Council Founder / Member ● Microsoft® MVP -.NET ● Microsoft® Surface Partner Advisory Council ● INETA Speaker – International.NET Users Group Association ● Windows and.NET Magazine Advisory Board Member ●.NET Developers Journal Magazine Advisory Board Member ● Author / Speaker


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