Introduction
The Microsoft Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) formerly
code named "Avalon" provides the foundation for building applications
and high reliability experiences in Longhorn, blending together application UI,
documents, and media content, while exploiting the full power of your computer.
WPF is the graphical subsystem of .NET frameworks 3.0 formerly called WinFX.
XAML is the markup language used to write WPF applications. WPF provides
developers and designers with a unified programming model for building rich
Windows smart client user experiences that incorporate UI, media, and
documents. WPF provides a reliable programming model for building applications
and provides a clear separation between the User Interface and the business
logic.
XAML
Extensible Application Markup Language (XAML) by Microsoft
is a declarative XML-based language used to define objects and their
properties, relationships and interactions. The acronym originally stood for
Extensible Avalon Markup Language, where Avalon was the code name for Windows
Presentation Foundation (WPF), but now it stands for Extensible Application
Markup Language. XAML files are XML files that generally have the .xaml extension.
XAML is used as a UI objects, events and many others in Windows
Presentation Foundation. In Windows Workflow Foundation the Workflow is also defined
using XAML. In addition, Visual Studio, SharePoint Designer, Microsoft Expression and
XAMLpad are used for XAML file manipulation.
WPF Applications
Windows Presentation Foundation has many good features that enriches
your next generation applications. WPF is intended to be the next-generation
graphics API for Windows applications on the desktop. Applications written in
WPF are visually of a higher quality. The features that enriched in WPF are Graphical
Services, Deployment, Interoperability, Media Services, Data Binding, User
Interface, Annotations, Imaging, Effects, Text, Input and Accessibility.
Start with a sample WPF web application
After setting your infrastructure for your WPF application
development, first open you're your Visual Studio 2005 and create new project. This
WPF project template will come under the .NET frameworks 3.0 and select the WinFX
Web Browser Application project template. And your new project will be created
with two .xaml files and other files associated with the project created.
Add a root Page element to Default.xaml, with custom configurations
as per your needs. First the title bar of the browser is set to "My First
WPF Application", and then width of the browser is 800 device-independent
pixels, then height of the browser is 600 device-independent pixels, then title
of the page is "My First WPF Application � Home Page".
If you find the following namespace under your Default.xaml
file,
xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/avalon/2005"
xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/xaml/2005"
Then replace them with the following namespace.< br/>
xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"
xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml"
Now add a new WinFX page and name it as DisplayPage.xaml. This
DisplayPage.xaml file will finally be used to bind display data to the UI.
In the Default.xaml file add the following XAML tags to
display a text with hyper linked. The hyperlink will navigate to your next XAML
file.
<!---->
<StackPanel Grid.Row="1" Grid.Column="1" Orientation="Horizontal"
Margin="0 0 0 40">
<TextBlock>
<Hyperlink NavigateUri="DisplayPage.xaml">
Data DisplayPage
</Hyperlink>
</TextBlock>
</StackPanel>
In the above format the text will display in your browser. Then
you can place the text anywhere in your browser by display formatting. The
following XAML tag will help you to format the display of your text.
<!---->
<Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<ColumnDefinition Width="Auto" />
<ColumnDefinition Width="Auto" />
</Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<Grid.RowDefinitions>
<RowDefinition Height="*" />
<RowDefinition Height="Auto" />
</Grid.RowDefinitions>
<Grid.Resources>
<Style TargetType="{x:Type TextBlock}">
<Setter Property="FontFamily" Value="Lucida Console" />
<Setter Property="FontSize" Value="30" />
</Style>
</Grid.Resources>
Now add an image file to your solution and how it can be
displayed. In this sample I'm trying to add an image called tiger.PNG. In the
Solution Explorer tree, right-click the image and select Properties from the
context menu.
Change the build action from Resource to Content.
And change the copy to output directory as copy always.
And place the following XAML tags in your DisplayPage.xaml
file.
<Viewbox Grid.Row="0" Grid.Column="0" Grid.ColumnSpan="2"
StretchDirection="DownOnly">
<Canvas Width="600" Height="600">
<Canvas>
<!-- bounding image Path -->
<Image Source="tiger.PNG" />
</Canvas>
</Canvas>
</Viewbox>
These are the simple steps to start with the Windows
Presentation Foundation. Hopefully this will help beginner of WPF.
Setup infrastructure for your application
"WPF/E" (codename) Community Technology Preview for Windows
(Feb 2007)
"WPF/E" (codename) Community Technology Preview Sample Pack
(Feb 2007)
WPF/E" (codename) Software Development Kit (SDK) Community
Technology Preview (Feb 2007)
Others
Microsoft Expression Web Free Trial
Microsoft� Expression Web Quickstart Guide
References
http://wpf.netfx3.com/
http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/netframework/aa663321.aspx< br/>
http://www.xamldev.com