Book Image

Learn WinUI 3.0

By : Alvin Ashcraft
5 (1)
Book Image

Learn WinUI 3.0

5 (1)
By: Alvin Ashcraft

Overview of this book

WinUI 3.0 takes a whole new approach to delivering Windows UI components and controls, and is able to deliver the same features on more than one version of Windows 10. Learn WinUI 3.0 is a comprehensive introduction to WinUI and Windows apps for anyone who is new to WinUI, Universal Windows Platform (UWP), and XAML applications. The book begins by helping you get to grips with the latest features in WinUI and shows you how XAML is used in UI development. You'll then set up a new Visual Studio environment and learn how to create a new UWP project. Next, you'll find out how to incorporate the Model-View-ViewModel (MVVM) pattern in a WinUI project and develop unit tests for ViewModel commands. Moving on, you'll cover the Windows Template Studio (WTS) new project wizard and WinUI libraries in a step-by-step way. As you advance, you'll discover how to leverage the Fluent Design system to create beautiful WinUI applications. You'll also explore the contents and capabilities of the Windows Community Toolkit and learn to create a new UWP user control. Toward the end, the book will teach you how to build, debug, unit test, deploy, and monitor apps in production. By the end of this book, you'll have learned how to build WinUI applications from scratch and modernize existing WPF and WinForms applications using WinUI controls.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
1
Section 1: Introduction to WinUI and Windows Applications
8
Section 2: Extending WinUI and Modernizing Applications
13
Section 3: Build and Deploy on Windows and Beyond

Summary

In this chapter, we have covered some essential tools and techniques for debugging your XAML applications. While the material primarily references UWP, the same will work for WinUI 3 when the Visual Studio XAML tooling is updated with better WinUI support. If you are developing WPF applications, tools such as the Live Visual Tree, Live Property Explorer, and Rapid XAML Toolkit will all work for those projects. Leveraging these tools will shorten the time you spend debugging and help you deliver higher-quality software.

In the next chapter, we will return to the WebView2 browser control. You will learn how to use WebView2 to embed an ASP.NET Core Blazor single-page application (SPA) inside a WinUI application.