Book Image

Windows Presentation Foundation Development Cookbook

Book Image

Windows Presentation Foundation Development Cookbook

Overview of this book

Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) is Microsoft's development tool for building rich Windows client user experiences that incorporate UIs, media, and documents. With the updates in .NET 4.7, Visual Studio 2017, C# 7, and .NET Standard 2.0, WPF has taken giant strides and is now easier than ever for developers to use. If you want to get an in-depth view of WPF mechanics and capabilities, then this book is for you. The book begins by teaching you about the fundamentals of WPF and then quickly shows you the standard controls and the layout options. It teaches you about data bindings and how to utilize resources and the MVVM pattern to maintain a clean and reusable structure in your code. After this, you will explore the animation capabilities of WPF and see how they integrate with other mechanisms. Towards the end of the book, you will learn about WCF services and explore WPF's support for debugging and asynchronous operations. By the end of the book, you will have a deep understanding of WPF and will know how to build resilient applications.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
2
Using WPF Standard Controls

Introduction

The term interoperability describes the capability of different applications to exchange data via a common set of exchangeable formats. It is a characteristic of the product or system, whose interfaces are completely understood, to work with other products or systems.

WPF and Windows Forms present two different architectures for creating application interfaces. The WindowsFormsHost and ElementHost classes are used to implement the interoperation capabilities between these two.

Similarly, WPF provides interoperability with Win32 programs, which are written in unmanaged C++ code:

In this chapter, we will start with interoperation between WPF and WinForm, demonstrating the way to host a WinForm control in a WPF application and a WPF control in a WinForm application. Then, we will move forward to learn interoperability between WPF and Win32, followed by embedding ActiveX controls inside WPF.