In Caliburn.Micro we have a series of supporting services for building presentation tiers. Among them is the EventAggregator, a service which supports in-process publish/subscribe. There are various implementations of this pattern available in other frameworks, but I think you’ll find that Caliburn...
Posted to
.NET & Funky Fresh
by
Rob Eisenberg
on 05-30-2011
Filed under: WPF, Xaml, Caliburn, Silverlight, RIA, Tutorial, MVVM, UI Architecture, Caliburn Micro, WP7
One of the main features of Caliburn.Micro is manifest in its ability to remove the need for boiler plate code by acting on a series of conventions. Some people love conventions and some hate them. That’s why CM’s conventions are fully customizable and can even be turned off completely if...
Posted to
.NET & Funky Fresh
by
Rob Eisenberg
on 12-16-2010
Filed under: WPF, Xaml, databinding, WPF/e, Caliburn, Featured, Silverlight, RIA, Tutorial, MVVM, UI Architecture, Caliburn Micro, WP7
Up until now I’ve been focusing on fairly simple usage of Screens and Conductors. In this article, I want to show something a bit more sophisticated. This sample is based loosely on the ideas demonstrated by Billy Hollis in this well-known DNR TV episode . Rather than take the time to explain what...
Posted to
.NET & Funky Fresh
by
Rob Eisenberg
on 11-18-2010
Filed under: WPF, Xaml, databinding, WPF/e, Caliburn, Featured, Silverlight, RIA, Tutorial, MEF, MVVM, UI Architecture, Caliburn Micro, WP7
Let’s look at another example: this time a simple MDI shell that uses “Screen Collections.” As you can see, once again, I have kept things pretty small and simple: Here’s a screenshot of the application when it’s running: Here we have a simple WPF application with a series...
Posted to
.NET & Funky Fresh
by
Rob Eisenberg
on 10-19-2010
Filed under: WPF, Xaml, databinding, WPF/e, Caliburn, Featured, Silverlight, RIA, Tutorial, MVVM, UI Architecture, Caliburn Micro, WP7
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...
Posted to
.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