Windows® Presentation Foundation Unleashed
by Adam Nathan; Daniel Lehenbauer - Lead Developer Responsible for WPF 3D
Essential Windows Communication Foundation: For .NET Framework 3.5
by Steve Resnick; Richard Crane; Chris Bowen
Essential Windows Workflow Foundation
by Dharma Shukla; Bob Schmidt
Microsoft® Windows 7 Unleashed
by Paul McFedries
Programming WCF Services, 2nd Edition
by Juval Löwy
Windows® Presentation Foundation Unleashed
by Adam Nathan; Daniel Lehenbauer - Lead Developer Responsible for WPF 3D
Microsoft® Windows® XP Inside Out, Second Edition
by Ed Bott; Carl Siechert; Craig Stinson
Advanced Windows Debugging
by Mario Hewardt; Daniel Pravat
“Chris Anderson was one of the chief architects of the
next-generation GUI stack, the Windows Presentation Framework
(WPF), which is the subject of this book. Chris’s insights
shine a light from the internals of WPF to those standing at the
entrance, guiding you through the concepts that form the foundation
of his creation.”
–From the foreword by Chris Sells
“As one of the architects behind WPF, Chris Anderson
skillfully explains not only the ‘how,’ but also the
‘why.’ This book is an excellent resource for anyone
wanting to understand the design principles and best practices of
WPF.”
–Anders Hejlsberg, technical fellow, Microsoft
Corporation
“If WPF stands as the user interface technology for the
next generation of Windows, then Chris Anderson stands as the
Charles Petzold for the next generation of Windows user interface
developers.”
–Ted Neward, founding editor, TheServerSide.NET
“This is an excellent book that does a really great job of
introducing you to WPF, and explaining how to unlock the tremendous
potential it provides.”
–Scott Guthrie, general manager, Developer Division,
Microsoft
“WPF is a whole new animal when it comes to creating UI
applications, drawing on design principles originating from both
Windows Forms and the Web. Chris does a great job of not only
explaining how to use the new features and capabilities of WPF
(with associated code and XAML based syntax), but also explains why
things work the way they do. As one of the architects of WPF, Chris
gives great insight into the plumbing and design principles of WPF,
as well as the mechanics of writing code using it. This is truly
essential if you plan to be a serious WPF developer.”
–Brian Noyes, chief architect, IDesign Inc.; Microsoft
Regional Director; Microsoft MVP
“I was given the opportunity to take a look at Chris
Anderson’s book and found it to be an exceedingly valuable
resource, one I can comfortably recommend to others. I can only
speak for myself, but when faced with a new technology I like to
have an understanding of how it relates to and works in relation to
the technology it is supplanting. Chris starts his book by tying
the WPF directly into the world of Windows 32-bit UI in C++. Chris
demonstrates both a keen understanding of the underlying logic that
drives the WPF and how it works and also a skill in helping the
reader build on their own knowledge through examples that mimic how
you would build your cutting edge applications.”
–Bill Sheldon, principal engineer, InterKnowlogy
Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF)
replaces Microsoft’s diverse presentation technologies with a
unified, state-of-the-art platform for building rich applications.
WPF combines the best of Windows and the Web; fully integrates user
interfaces, documents, and media; and leverages the full power of
XML-based declarative programming.
In Essential Windows Presentation
Foundation, former WPF architect Chris Anderson
systematically introduces this breakthrough platform, focusing on
the concepts and techniques working developers need in order to
build robust applications for real users. Drawing on his unique
experience as an architect on the team, Anderson thoroughly
illuminates the crucial new concepts underlying WPF and reveals how
its APIs work together to offer developers unprecedented value.
Through working sample code, you’ll
discover how WPF draws on the Web’s simple models for markup
and deployment, common frame for applications, and rich server
connectivity, and on Windows’ rich client model, simple
programming model, strong control over look-and-feel, and rich
networking. Topics explored in depth include
WPF components and architecture
Key WPF design decisions–and why they matter
XAML markup language
Controls
Layouts
Visuals and media, including 2D, 3D, video, and animation
Data integration
Actions
Styles
WPF Base Services
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Based on 15 Ratings
Where are the WHY's? - 2007-09-05
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Chris has always impressed me with his talent to explain even the hardest bits of WPF in an approachable fashion - I guess many Channel 9 and other dev-related sites visitors would agree with me. Therefore, I started reading Essential WPF with high expectations...
There is nothing wrong with the book itself, but the marketing is completely and utterly false. Chris himself emphasizes that he would like to talk about the "why-s" of the platform and this is the very reason why I bought his book - only to find out that nothing like that happens. Quite honestly, any technical author could write this book after reading Windows 3.0 SDK documentation thoroughly - there is very little added value or insight. There are moments when Chris writes "this may be confusing..." and in this very moment, you would expect "... but it was necessary because of this and that" but that almost never happens. You are left with doubts about the quality of WPF which is probably the worst thing an author can do.
Don't be confused as I was: this book is not about "why-s", it is not about reasoning, it is not about in-depth discussion of some decisions made. It is an extensive walkthrough through the WPF features, it is a description of the framework but nothing more. Of course you will find some insights in this book but they are definitely not in proportion to Chris's role in the WPF team and his otherwise great skills.
I, personally, started reading this book as a big fan of WPF and was left with doubts if all the complexity is really necessary (and some things are pretty complex compared to Flex which is my current development environment). Actually, I think that I enjoyed reading the WPF introductory articles in the Windows SDK 3.0 documentation more and honestly, I thought that this could never happen when comparing docs and a book.
Anyway, if you really need great WPF book, don't waste money on this one - go buy Adam Nathan's WPF Unleashed. I'm on page 130 now and my enthusiasm for WPF is back. That book provides exactly what I wanted - deep discussion, great insight, practical tips, well thought-out structure and trust that the sub-optimal things in the current version are known issues likely to be fixed in WPF vNext.
A fantastic primer on WPF - 2007-10-09
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If you're an experienced programmer and looking for a primer on WPF, Anderson has written a succinct overview that will definitely get you going in the right direction without wasting your time. It will give you not only the basics but provide an insight into what is going on and how you can go further in exploring WPF. Although it lacks in-depth examples (and source code) this book provides a readable reference covering all aspects of WPF- what it is, what it can do, and what makes WPF different.
Good primer but lacks the depth of Programming WPF book - 2008-06-26
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This book provides a good introduction to the overall architecture of WPF. However, it lacks the depth necessary to feel comfortable performing the more advanced programming activities that you will be tasked with on a real WPF project. This is really a beginners book which does not even advance to the intermediate level. The Programming WPF book by Chris Sells provides more in depth coverage of WPF and is therefore a better buy. Therefore, read this book just to get started but expect to read another to really make some headway into understanding WPF.
A terrific book to really understand WPF - 2008-05-27
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This book is all about the philosophy behind the WPF design and architecture. It delivers a simple but comprehensive understanding about WPF features - given this simple "big picture" it will be easier to learn the details - they will just fit in nicely and effortlessly. The book is an essense of everything that you should know to become a professional WPF developer - everything else is in IntelliSense/online help. Given this knowledge, you'll easily learn how to use any WPF topic.
Decent - 2008-05-19
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Essential WPF by Chris Anderson is intuitive and inspiring. The author explains WPF in a baby-step-forward approach with mostly success. Nearly every facet of discussion comes with a clear example. For a 450+ page book, much of WFP is explained in a fashiion that intermediate developers (designers?) can comprehend.
But this does not mean the book provides buy-in for developers to use WFP instantly. For example, every time I attempted to "get my hands dirty", not long was I easily discouraged. I figured that I just needed to keep reading the book before trying again .. and again .. and again .. until I was out of book. From making a Windows application, to ASP.Net, to Silverlight using VS2008 and Expression Blend, nothing was easy enough to finish a small project much less an enterprise application. And then I would have to explain to my colleagues how it works.
In summary, Chris did an impecable job explaining the complexities and modeling of WFP. This book is an acceptable starting point. But do not expect to jump right into WFP during or even after reading this entire book. Rather take note that you *understand* WFP, and then move to the next reference of choice.
Top Level Categories:
Operating Systems
Programming
Sub-Categories:
Operating Systems > Windows XP
Programming > Windows
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