Book Image

Programming Windows Workflow Foundation: Practical WF Techniques and Examples using XAML and C#

By : Kenneth Scott Allen
Book Image

Programming Windows Workflow Foundation: Practical WF Techniques and Examples using XAML and C#

By: Kenneth Scott Allen

Overview of this book

Windows Workflow Foundation (WF) is a technology for defining, executing, and managing workflows. It is part of the .NET Framework 3.0 and will be available natively in the Windows Vista operating system. Windows Workflow Foundation might be the most significant piece of middleware to arrive on the Windows platform since COM+ and the Distributed Transaction Coordinator. The difference is, not every application needs a distributed transaction, but nearly every application does have a workflow encoded inside it. In this book, K Scott Allen, author of renowned .NET articles at www.odetocode.com, provides you with all the information needed to develop successful products with Windows Workflow. From the basics of how Windows Workflow can solve the difficult problems inherent in workflow solutions, through authoring workflows in code, learning about the base activity library in Windows Workflow and the different types of workflow provided, and on to building event-driven workflows using state machines, workflow communications, and finally rules and conditions in Windows Workflow, this book will give you the in-depth information you need. Throughout the book, an example "bug reporting" workflow system is developed, showcasing the technology and techniques used.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
Programming Windows Workflow Foundation: Practical WF Techniques and Examples using XAML and C#
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
Preface

Summary


In this chapter we've delved into the communication capabilities of Windows Workflow. We've seen how correlation attributes and correlation tokens can tie together related activities, and examined role‑based authorization. Underneath the event-driven activities we've seen how workflow queues manage events and data arriving at the workflow. We can use these queues for our own communication purposes, or query the queues to see which activities are waiting for events inside a workflow. Finally, we examined the web service capabilities of Windows Workflow by building a simple web service, and a client to consume the web service.