Book Image

Mastering Windows Presentation Foundation - Second Edition

By : Sheridan Yuen
Book Image

Mastering Windows Presentation Foundation - Second Edition

By: Sheridan Yuen

Overview of this book

Microsoft Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) provides a rich set of libraries and APIs for developers to create engaging user experiences. This book features a wide range of examples, from simple to complex, to demonstrate how to develop enterprise-grade applications with WPF. This updated second edition of Mastering Windows Presentation Foundation starts by introducing the benefits of using the Model-View-View Model (MVVM) software architectural pattern with WPF, then moves on, to explain how best to debug our WPF applications. It explores application architecture, and we learn how to build the foundation layer of our applications. It then demonstrates data binding in detail, and examines the various built-in WPF controls and a variety of ways in which we can customize them to suit our requirements. We then investigate how to create custom controls, for when the built-in functionality in WPF cannot be adapted for our needs. The latter half of the book deals with polishing our applications, using practical animations, stunning visuals and responsive data validation. It then moves on, to look at improving application performance, and ends with tutorials on several methods of deploying our applications.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)

Amalgamating validation and visuals

Let's now utilize some of the techniques that we discussed in Chapter 8, Creating Visually Appealing User Interfaces, to design a visually appealing user interface, that highlights validation errors in a novel way, using our glowing example. For this example, we want the ability to know when the data has changed, so we'll need to extend our earlier BaseSynchronizableDataModel class in another new base class.

Let's duplicate our BaseNotifyValidationModelExtended class, so as to create a new BaseNotifyValidationModelGeneric class, and make it extend our synchronizable base class. In doing so, we will also need to make it generic, and add the same generic constraints for the T generic type parameter from the base class to its declaration:

using CompanyName.ApplicationName.DataModels.Interfaces;

...

public abstract class BaseNotifyValidationModelGeneric<T> :
BaseSynchronizableDataModel<T>, INotifyPropertyChanged,
INotifyDataErrorInfo...