Book Image

MCTS: Microsoft Silverlight 4 Development (70-506) Certification Guide

By : Johnny Tordgeman
Book Image

MCTS: Microsoft Silverlight 4 Development (70-506) Certification Guide

By: Johnny Tordgeman

Overview of this book

Microsoft Silverlight is a powerful development platform for creating engaging, interactive applications for many screens across the Web, desktop, and mobile devices. Silverlight is also a great (and growing) Line-Of-Business platform and is increasingly being used to build data-driven business applications. Silverlight is based on familiar .NET languages such as C# which enables existing .NET developers to get started developing rich internet applications almost immediately. "MCTS: Microsoft Silverlight 4 Development (70-506) Certification Guide" will show you how to prepare for and pass the (70-506): TS: Microsoft Silverlight 4 Development exam.Packed with practical examples and Q&As, MCTS: Microsoft Silverlight 4 Development (70-506) Certification Guide starts by showing you how to lay out a user interface, enhance the user interface, implement application logic, work with data and interact with a host platform amongst others.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
MCTS: Microsoft Silverlight 4 Development (70-506) Certification Guide
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Creating out-of-browser applications


One of the biggest features of Silverlight since Version 3 is out-of-browser (OOB). This feature allows us to create an application in Silverlight that will be installed on the user's local machine. Once installed on the user's local machine, our application can interact with the desktop capabilities of the user's machine in various ways. Among the different integrations we get, we can read the machine's network state, show toast notifications, display web content, run applications on full screen, and much more. Silverlight 4 introduced a new powerful mode for OOB applications called elevated trust. Running our application in this mode, we can read local files and resources, show fewer confirmation prompts to the user, and use COM automation to communicate with other applications (such as Microsoft Office) or software APIs such as the speech API of the OS or drivers, which allows COM communication. An OOB application looks, and behaves, like any other...