Previously, we discussed the theory and basic APIs for Screens and Conductors in Caliburn.Micro. Now I would like to walk through the first of several samples. This particular sample demonstrates how to set up a simple navigation-style shell using Conductor<T> and two “Page” view models...
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.NET & Funky Fresh
by
Rob Eisenberg
on 10-12-2010
Filed under: WPF, Xaml, databinding, WPF/e, .NET 3.5, Caliburn, Featured, Silverlight, RIA, Tutorial, MVVM, UI Architecture, Caliburn Micro, WP7
Actions, Coroutines and Conventions tend to draw the most attention to Caliburn.Micro, but the Screens and Conductors piece is probably most important to understand if you want your UI to be engineered well. It’s particularly important if you want to leverage composition. The terms Screen, Screen...
Posted to
.NET & Funky Fresh
by
Rob Eisenberg
on 10-08-2010
Filed under: WPF, WPF/e, Caliburn, Featured, Silverlight, RIA, Tutorial, MVVM, UI Architecture, Caliburn Micro, WP7
Before our WP7 detour , we were deep in the thick of Actions . I mentioned that there was one more compelling feature of the Actions concept called Coroutines. If you haven’t heard that term before, here’s what wikipedia * has to say: In computer science , coroutines are program components...
Posted to
.NET & Funky Fresh
by
Rob Eisenberg
on 08-21-2010
Filed under: WPF, WPF/e, Caliburn, Featured, Silverlight, DSL, RIA, Tutorial, MEF, MVVM, UI Architecture, Caliburn Micro, WP7
Hopefully, previous articles have you up to speed on what Caliburn.Micro is , its basic configuration , and how to take advantage of a few of its features . In this part, I want to talk about some WP7 specifics issues. It’s unfortunate that I have to call out WP7, but your going to find that while...
Posted to
.NET & Funky Fresh
by
Rob Eisenberg
on 08-07-2010
Filed under: Xaml, WPF/e, Featured, Silverlight, Tutorial, MVVM, UI Architecture, Caliburn Micro, WP7
We briefly introduced actions in Pt. 1 , but there is so much more to know. To begin our investigation, we’ll take our simple “Hello” example and see what it looks like when we explicitly create the actions rather than use conventions. Here’s the Xaml: <UserControl x:Class...
Posted to
.NET & Funky Fresh
by
Rob Eisenberg
on 07-17-2010
Filed under: WPF, Xaml, databinding, WPF/e, Caliburn, Featured, Silverlight, RIA, Tutorial, MEF, MVVM, UI Architecture, Caliburn Micro