Book Image

Microsoft Silverlight 4 Data and Services Cookbook

Book Image

Microsoft Silverlight 4 Data and Services Cookbook

Overview of this book

Microsoft Silverlight is a programmable web browser plugin that enables features including animation, vector graphics, and audio-video playback – features that characterize Rich Internet Applications. However, Silverlight is a great (and growing) Line-Of-Business platform and is increasingly being used to build data-driven business applications. Silverlight Data Services enable efficient access to your data, allowing you to draw on multiple sources of data and solve particular data problems. There is very little existing material that demonstrates how to build data-driven solutions with the platform. Silverlight 3 made a big step into Line-Of-Business data services and Silverlight 4 builds further upon this. This book will enable .NET developers to get their finger on the pulse of data-driven business applications in Silverlight.This book is not a general Silverlight 3/4 overview book; it is uniquely aimed at developers who want to build data-driven applications. It focuses on showing .NET developers how to interact with, and handle multiple sources of data in Silverlight business applications, and how to solve particular data problems following a practical hands-on approach, using real-world recipes. It is a practical cookbook that teaches you how to build data-rich business applications with Silverlight that draw on multiple sources of data. Most of the covered features work both in Silverlight 3 and 4. However, we cover some that are specific for Silverlight 4, which will therefore not work with Silverlight 3. Where this is the case, it is clearly indicated.Packed with reusable, real-world recipes, the book begins by introducing you to general principles when programming Silverlight. It then dives deep into the world of data services, covering all the options available to access data and communicate with services to get the most out of data in your Silverlight business applications, whilst at the same time providing a rich user experience. Chapters cover data binding, data controls, the concepts of talking to services, communicating with WCF, ASMX and REST services, and much more.By following the practical recipes in this book, which are of varying difficulty levels, you will learn the concepts needed to create data-rich business applications—from the creation of a Silverlight application, to displaying data in the Silverlight application and upgrading your existing applications to use Silverlight. Each recipe covers a data services topic, going from the description of the problem, through a conceptual solution to a solution containing sample code.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Silverlight 4 Data and Services Cookbook
Credits
About the authors
About the reviewers
Preface

Parsing REST results with LINQ-To-XML


We have successfully connected to a REST service from a Silverlight application in the previous recipe. The response from the service is XML. Most of the time, showing pure XML to the end user is not the goal of an application, so we'll want to parse the XML. Silverlight contains several options to work with XML, which include XmlReader/XmlWriter, XmlSerializer, and LINQ-To-XML (also known as XLinq). The latter is a preferred way to parse XML.

In this recipe, we'll look at how we can use LINQ-To-XML to transform XML into real data. The raw user data (originally in XML) will be transformed in User objects.

Getting ready

This recipe builds on the code created in the previous recipe, so you can continue using that solution. Alternatively, you can use the starter solution for this recipe located in the Chapter08/TalkingToSimpleRESTServices_LinqToXml_Starter folder in the code bundle available on the Packt website. The finished solution for this recipe can be...