The #1 WPF Book--Now Updated for WPF 4.5! Thorough, authoritative coverage, practical examples, clear writing, and full-color presentation make this one of the most widely acclaimed programming books of the last decade. Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) is the recommended technology for creating modern Windows desktop apps. Whether you want to develop traditional user interfaces or integrate 3D graphics, audio/video, animation, dynamic skinning, touch, rich document support, speech recognition, or more, WPF enables you to do so in a seamless, resolution-independent manner that scales…mehr
The #1 WPF Book--Now Updated for WPF 4.5! Thorough, authoritative coverage, practical examples, clear writing, and full-color presentation make this one of the most widely acclaimed programming books of the last decade.
Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) is the recommended technology for creating modern Windows desktop apps. Whether you want to develop traditional user interfaces or integrate 3D graphics, audio/video, animation, dynamic skinning, touch, rich document support, speech recognition, or more, WPF enables you to do so in a seamless, resolution-independent manner that scales from small tablets to large TVs. WPF 4.5 Unleashed is the authoritative book that covers it all, in a practical and approachable fashion, authored by WPF guru and Microsoft architect Adam Nathan.
Covers everything you need to know about Extensible Application Markup Language (XAML)
Examines the WPF feature areas in incredible depth: controls, layout, resources, data binding, styling, graphics, animation, and more
Delves into topics that aren t covered by most books: 3D, speech, audio/video, documents, effects
Shows how to create popular UI elements and leverage built-in controls such as the new Office-style Ribbon
Demonstrates how to create sophisticated UI mechanisms, such as Visual Studio-like collapsible/dockable panes
Explains how to create first-class custom controls for WPF
Demonstrates how to create hybrid WPF software that leverages Windows Forms, DirectX, ActiveX, or other non-WPF technologies
Explains how to exploit desktop features, such as Jump Lists and taskbar customizations, and the same toast notifications used by Windows Store apps
Adam Nathan is a principal software architect for Microsoft in the Startup Business Group. Adam was previously the founding developer and architect for Popfly, Microsoft's first product built on Silverlight, named one of the 25 most innovative products of 2007 by PCWorld Magazine. Having started his career on Microsoft’s Common Language Runtime team, Adam has been at the core of .NET and WPF technologies since the very beginning. Adam’s books have been considered required reading by many inside Microsoft and throughout the industry. He is the author of the best-selling WPF Unleashed (Sams, 2006) that was nominated for a 2008 Jolt Award, WPF 4 Unleashed (Sams, 2010), Windows 8 Apps with XAML and C# Unleashed (Sams, 2012), 101 Windows Phone 7 Apps (Sams, 2011), Silverlight 1.0 Unleashed (Sams, 2008), and .NET and COM: The Complete Interoperability Guide (Sams, 2002); a coauthor of ASP.NET: Tips, Tutorials, and Code (Sams, 2001); and a contributor to books including .NET Framework Standard Library Annotated Reference, Volume 2 (Addison-Wesley, 2005) and Windows Developer Power Tools (O’Reilly, 2006). Adam is also the creator of PINVOKE.NET and its Visual Studio add-in. You can find him online at www.adamnathan.net or @adamnathan on Twitter.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction 1 Who Should Read This Book? 2 Software Requirements 3 Code Examples 3 How This Book Is Organized 4 Conventions Used in This Book 6
Part I: Background Chapter 1: Why WPF? 7 A Look at the Past 8 Enter WPF 9 The Evolution of WPF 12 Summary 16 Chapter 2: XAML Demystified 17 XAML Defined 19 Elements and Attributes 20 Namespaces 22 Property Elements 25 Type Converters 26 Markup Extensions 28 Children of Object Elements 31 Mixing XAML with Procedural Code 36 XAML2009 44 XAML Keywords 49 Summary 52 Chapter 3: WPF Fundamentals 55 A Tour of the Class Hierarchy 55 Logical and Visual Trees 57 Dependency Properties 62 Summary 76
Part II: Building a WPF Application Chapter 4: Sizing, Positioning, and Transforming Elements 77 Controlling Size 78 Controlling Position 83 Applying Transforms 86 Summary 95 Chapter 5: Layout with Panels 97 Canvas 98 StackPanel 100 WrapPanel 102 DockPanel 105 Grid 108 Primitive Panels 120 Handling Content Overflow 122 Putting It All Together: Creating a Visual Studio-Like Collapsible, Dockable, Resizable Pane 130 Summary 140 Chapter 6: Input Events: Keyboard, Mouse, Stylus, and Touch 141 Routed Events 141 Keyboard Events 150 Mouse Events 152 Stylus Events 156 Touch Events 158 Commands 170 Summary 176 Chapter 7: Structuring and Deploying an Application 177 Standard Desktop Applications 177 Navigation-Based Desktop Applications 193 Gadget-Style Applications 205 XAML Browser Applications 207 Loose XAML Pages 213 Summary 215 Chapter 8: Exploiting Windows Desktop Features 217 Jump Lists 217 Taskbar Item Customizations 229 Aero Glass 233 TaskDialog 236 Summary 239
Part III: Controls Chapter 9: Content Controls 241 Buttons 243 Simple Containers 248 Containers with Headers 252 Summary 254 Chapter 10: Items Controls 255 Common Functionality 256 Selectors 261 Menus 298 Other Items Controls 302 Summary &
Introduction 1 Who Should Read This Book? 2 Software Requirements 3 Code Examples 3 How This Book Is Organized 4 Conventions Used in This Book 6
Part I: Background Chapter 1: Why WPF? 7 A Look at the Past 8 Enter WPF 9 The Evolution of WPF 12 Summary 16 Chapter 2: XAML Demystified 17 XAML Defined 19 Elements and Attributes 20 Namespaces 22 Property Elements 25 Type Converters 26 Markup Extensions 28 Children of Object Elements 31 Mixing XAML with Procedural Code 36 XAML2009 44 XAML Keywords 49 Summary 52 Chapter 3: WPF Fundamentals 55 A Tour of the Class Hierarchy 55 Logical and Visual Trees 57 Dependency Properties 62 Summary 76
Part II: Building a WPF Application Chapter 4: Sizing, Positioning, and Transforming Elements 77 Controlling Size 78 Controlling Position 83 Applying Transforms 86 Summary 95 Chapter 5: Layout with Panels 97 Canvas 98 StackPanel 100 WrapPanel 102 DockPanel 105 Grid 108 Primitive Panels 120 Handling Content Overflow 122 Putting It All Together: Creating a Visual Studio-Like Collapsible, Dockable, Resizable Pane 130 Summary 140 Chapter 6: Input Events: Keyboard, Mouse, Stylus, and Touch 141 Routed Events 141 Keyboard Events 150 Mouse Events 152 Stylus Events 156 Touch Events 158 Commands 170 Summary 176 Chapter 7: Structuring and Deploying an Application 177 Standard Desktop Applications 177 Navigation-Based Desktop Applications 193 Gadget-Style Applications 205 XAML Browser Applications 207 Loose XAML Pages 213 Summary 215 Chapter 8: Exploiting Windows Desktop Features 217 Jump Lists 217 Taskbar Item Customizations 229 Aero Glass 233 TaskDialog 236 Summary 239
Part III: Controls Chapter 9: Content Controls 241 Buttons 243 Simple Containers 248 Containers with Headers 252 Summary 254 Chapter 10: Items Controls 255 Common Functionality 256 Selectors 261 Menus 298 Other Items Controls 302 Summary &
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