𝔖 Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

📁

Developer's Guide to Microsoft Prism 4: Building Modular MVVM Applications with Windows Presentation Foundation and Microsoft Silverlight

✍ Scribed by Bob Brumfield, Geoff Cox, David Hill, Brian Noyes, Michael Puleio, Karl Shifflett


Publisher
Microsoft Press
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Leaves
280
Edition
1
Category
Library

⬇  Acquire This Volume

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


This guide provides everything you need to get started with Prism and to use it to create flexible, maintainable Windows® Presentation Foundation (WPF) and Microsoft Silverlight® 4.0 applications. It can be challenging to design and build WPF or Silverlight client applications that are flexible, maintainable, and that can evolve over time based on changing requirements. These kinds of applications require a loosely coupled modular architecture that allows individual parts of the application to be independently developed and tested, allowing the application to be modified or extended later on. Additionally, the architecture should promote testability, code re-use, and flexibility. Prism helps you to design and build flexible and maintainable WPF and Silverlight applications by using design patterns that support important architectural design principles, such as separation of concerns and loose coupling. This guide helps you understand these design patterns and describes how you can use Prism to implement them in your WPF or Silverlight applications. This guide will show you how to use Prism to implement the Model-View-View-Model (MVVM) pattern in your application, and how to use it along with commands and interaction requests to encapsulate application logic and make it testable. It will show you how to split an application into separate functional modules that can communicate through loosely coupled events, and how to integrate those modules into the overall application. It will show you how to dynamically construct a flexible user interface by using regions, and how to implement rich navigation across a modular application. Prism allows you to use these design patterns together or in isolation, depending on your particular application requirements.


📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES


Developer's Guide to Microsoft Prism 4:
✍ Bob Brumfield, Geoff Cox, David Hill, Brian Noyes, Michael Puleio, Karl Shifflet 📂 Library 📅 2011 🏛 Microsoft Press 🌐 English

This guide provides everything you need to get started with Prism and to use it to create flexible, maintainable Windows® Presentation Foundation (WPF) and Microsoft Silverlight® 4.0 applications. It can be challenging to design and build WPF or Silverlight client applications that are flexible, mai

Developer's Guide to Microsoft Prism 4:
✍ Bob Brumfield, Geoff Cox, David Hill, Brian Noyes, Michael Puleio, Karl Shifflet 📂 Library 📅 2011 🏛 Microsoft 🌐 English

This guide provides everything you need to get started with Prism and to use it to create flexible, maintainable Windows® Presentation Foundation (WPF) and Microsoft Silverlight® 4.0 applications. It can be challenging to design and build WPF or Silverlight client applications that are flexible, mai

Developer's Guide to Microsoft Prism 4:
✍ Bob Brumfield, Geoff Cox, David Hill, Brian Noyes, Michael Puleio, Karl Shiffle 📂 Library 📅 2011 🏛 Microsoft Press 🌐 English

It can be challenging to design and build WPF or Silverlight client applications that are flexible, maintainable, and that can evolve over time based on changing requirements. These kinds of applications require a loosely coupled modular architecture that allows individual parts of the application t

Windows Phone 7 Developer Guide: Buildin
✍ Dominic Betts, Federico Boerr, Scott Densmore, Jose Gallardo Salazar, Alex Homer 📂 Library 📅 2011 🏛 Microsoft Press 🌐 English

This guide describes a scenario around a fictitious company named Tailspin that has decided to include Windows Phone 7 as a client device for their existing cloud-based application. Their Windows Azure-based application named Surveys is described in detail in a previous book in this series, Developi

Windows® Phone 7 Developer Guide: Buildi
✍ Dominic Betts, Federico Boerr, Scott Densmore, Jose Gallardo Salazar, Alex Homer 📂 Library 📅 2010 🏛 Microsoft Corp 🌐 English

<DIV><p>This guide describes a scenario around a fictitious company named Tailspin that has decided to include Windows Phone 7 as a client device for their existing cloud-based application. Their Windows Azure-based application named Surveys is described in detail in a previous book in this series,

Windows Phone 7 Developer Guide: Buildin
✍ Dominic Betts, Federico Boerr, Scott Densmore, Jose Gallardo Salazar, Alex Homer 📂 Library 📅 2011 🏛 Microsoft Press 🌐 English

This guide describes a scenario around a fictitious company named Tailspin that has decided to include Windows Phone 7 as a client device for their existing cloud-based application. Their Windows Azure-based application named Surveys is described in detail in a previous book in this series, Developi