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Pro WPF with VB 2008: Windows Presentation Foundation with .NET 3.5
 
 
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Pro WPF with VB 2008: Windows Presentation Foundation with .NET 3.5 [Paperback]

Matthew MacDonald (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Book Description

1590599624 978-1590599624 April 1, 2008 1

The Microsoft Windows Presentation Foundation is a key part of .NET 3.5 and provides the foundation for building applications and high-quality user experiences in Windows Vista. It is likely to see wide adoption across the Microsoft .NET programming community.

WPF blends together user-interface design, documents, and media content, while exploiting the full power of your computer for the first time (it is able to write output directly to your computers graphics card).

This book explains how WPF works from the ground up. It will be one of the first books available, and also one of the most detailed. It follows on from the author’s previous, and highly successful books, covering Windows Forms (WPF's predecessor technology) and earlier versions of WPF. It is a one-stop shop in Apress’ proven ‘Pro’ style that leaves readers with a deep understanding of the technology and able to take the concepts away and apply them for themselves.


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Customers buy this book with Pro LINQ: Language Integrated Query in VB 2008 (Expert's Voice in .NET) $29.54

Pro WPF with VB 2008: Windows Presentation Foundation with .NET 3.5 + Pro LINQ: Language Integrated Query in VB 2008 (Expert's Voice in .NET)


Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Matthew MacDonald is an author, educator, and MCSD developer who has a passion for emerging technologies. He is a regular writer for developer journals such as Inside Visual Basic, ASPToday, and Hardcore Visual Studio .NET, and he's the author of several books about programming with .NET, including User Interfaces in VB .NET: Windows Forms and Custom Controls, The Book of VB .NET, and .NET Distributed Applications. In a dimly remembered past life, he studied English literature and theoretical physics. Send e-mail to him with praise, condemnation, and everything in between, to p2p@prosetech.com.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 1088 pages
  • Publisher: Apress; 1 edition (April 1, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1590599624
  • ISBN-13: 978-1590599624
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 7.1 x 2.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 4.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #286,669 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Matthew MacDonald is an author, educator, and MCSD developer who has a passion for emerging technologies. He is a regular writer for developer journals such as Inside Visual Basic, ASPToday, and Hardcore Visual Studio .NET, and he's the author of several books about programming with .NET. In a dimly remembered past life, he studied English literature and theoretical physics. Send e-mail to him with praise, condemnation, and everything in between, to p2p@prosetech.com.

 

Customer Reviews

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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars At Last! A WPF Book for VB Developers., April 6, 2008
This review is from: Pro WPF with VB 2008: Windows Presentation Foundation with .NET 3.5 (Paperback)
At last, someone has published a WPF book aimed at those of us who prefer to use Visual Basic for the code behind.

This is another well-written and comprehensive piece of work from a widely respected author.

Unsurprisingly, large chunks of content have been ported directly from his earlier WPF book, which was based on .NET 3.0 and has C# as the code behind. This makes complete sense as it is only the code behind aspects that need the different approach.

Because this is based on WPF 3.5 though, there are some additional items, such as binding to a LINQ expression in Chapter 16. There is also a completely new additional Chapter 26, which deals with the topics of Multithreading and Add-Ins.

I don't think Apress have the full chapter listing on their site yet (or at least I couldn't see it if they did). However, rest assured that the whole gamut of WPF topics is covered in this book, from Layout to Dependency Properties, Routed Events to Navigation - in fact everything from Animation to Z-Index.

The author has a very useful list of links that you can simply click on to save you (mis)typing them yourself from the book. They are available from his site at www.prosetech.com. Downloadable samples are available from there also.

In my opinion, you should buy this book for two reasons.

First, it is an excellent, wide ranging, clear description of what you will need to know in order to get fully to grips with this exciting (but not always intuitive) technology.

Second, there have been at least five WPF books published in the past year that have C# as the code behind. Publishers are in the business of selling books and they couldn't care less about whether C# or VB are "better". So I guess it's obvious that their stats show that they will sell more C# books. If you want to keep VB as a viable language, fully supported by authors and publishers, then the only way to ensure this is to make it worth their while to publish VB based books.

So for either or both these reasons, I rate this book as one of the most worthwhile investments you can make if you are a VB developer (or student) and you want to fully embrace all the tempting offerings available in Windows Presentation Foundation.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good, detailed information, December 16, 2008
By 
Mr. A. C. Clark (London, Paris, Peckham) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Pro WPF with VB 2008: Windows Presentation Foundation with .NET 3.5 (Paperback)
Upon first glance I would have expected this to be a simple "C#->VB.NET" translation of MacDonald's earlier offering, but even if that is the case it has been very well tailored to suit the VB.NET coder's standards and tastes. MacDonald goes into great detail with all of his examples and tends never to leave an errant XAML tag or line of VB.NET code unexplained. He points out various intricacies of the new features of the 3.5 framework, but despite all of this manages to keep things simple and engaging.

For the average WinForms coder, XAML and the other related technologies that made their début in .NET 3.0/3.5 can seem very daunting and often times totally unnecessary. MacDonald does a great job of explaining not only how to use the new technologies, but why they came about in the first place, Microsoft's motivation for creating (and pushing) them, and their benefits. In doing so he manages to - dare I say it - glamorise the new platform by extolling its virtues which served to make me as a reader and coder really want to start using XAML instead of WinForms. Without it, any initial efforts by me tended to be abortive and resulted in me resorting to using the much more familiar WinForms toolset.

I would recommend this to any VB.NET coder who is eager to make the transition from WinForms but has no idea how or where to start. MacDonald walks you through the basics and gives you the confidence you need to really get your teeth into that killer WPF app you've been meaning to write.

My only problems with the book are the occasional grammatical errors. Given that it was supposed to be an update to a prior book MacDonald wrote, you might expect the non-sensical sentences and grammatical errors to have been picked up by proof readers prior to publishing. In this case I started to notice them within the first two or three chapters and they made regular appearances throughout, which admittedly shook my confidence in the value of the book slightly, but the technical information it provides really has been invaluably helpful so far.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Great conceptually, examples aren't well done, October 23, 2009
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I enjoyed this book until I got midway through chapter 9. Up to this point, when I had a bug, I noticed that I couldn't really run WinDiff or CSDiff, because he's not holding your hand when he sets up the examples. Okay, fine, that strengthens my debugging skills. But, for example, although he doesn't tell you this in the book, in some of the chapters, he's actually working with one project that has a menu pointing to each of the concepts as he introduces it. Conceptually, that works okay, but to really learn something, I need to actually do it myself. Now I'm trying to track down a simple bug, but the layout of my code behind the code is different enough that I'm finding it extremely difficult. So do I keep spending my valuable time debugging to find what's probably simply an omission of a line of code, or do I plow ahead? And there are some things in his code that aren't explained, like a boolean variable, isReplaying, defined for the class, but only used within one function. Since the class implements an interface, is there something going on behind the scenes? Who knows?

I've also submitted errata for this book, but I notice they haven't been published on the web site yet. Perhaps my errata are wrong. Perhaps not, and nobody's gotten around to checking it out yet. In the mean time, I notice a version for VB 2010 is in the works and will be published within the next couple of months.

In other words, technical proof-reading leaves something to be desired. Sadly, that seems to be more and more of a problem with computer books. It's a shame, because in many ways, this really is a good book.

[Sigh.] Is this what the market has come to for technical books?

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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
button command, new uri, binding source, span tag, abstract class, customized button, scaled drawing, extracting tool, emissive material, dash pattern, protected mode, dependency properties and routed events, adorner layer, custom control template, lookless control, separate class library assembly, downloadable code for this chapter, chrome classes, routed event model, static markup extension, custom application class, property value inheritance, shared size groups, new control template, template selector
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Windows Forms, Visual Studio, Setter Property, Private Sub, Binding Path, Windows Vista, Public Class, Button Margin, End Get Set, Trigger Property, Button Name, Internet Explorer, Solution Explorer, Image Source, Button Grid, Grid Margin, Model Name, Button Padding, Times New Roman, Type Button, End Set End Property Private, Get Return, Path Fill, Public Shared, Model Number
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