Building Enterprise Applications with Windows Presentation Foundation and the Model View ViewModel Pattern (Developer Reference)

[Raffaele Garofalo] ↠ Building Enterprise Applications with Windows Presentation Foundation and the Model View ViewModel Pattern (Developer Reference) Ó Download Online eBook or Kindle ePUB. Building Enterprise Applications with Windows Presentation Foundation and the Model View ViewModel Pattern (Developer Reference) Worth 12 Bucks T Anderson If you are looking for in-depth and thorough coverage of MVVM, then I would say look elsewhere. If you are looking for a good introductory overview of the Line of Business applications, then this book is for you.Oreilly had the book listed at 250 pages, Amazon at 224. Including the index it is at 201, so it is a very short read. On the other hand, it is a very cheap book.I liked that t. Architectural book that is not deep enough according to Steven Hong. The book foc

Building Enterprise Applications with Windows Presentation Foundation and the Model View ViewModel Pattern (Developer Reference)

Author :
Rating : 4.27 (664 Votes)
Asin : 0735650926
Format Type : paperback
Number of Pages : 224 Pages
Publish Date : 2016-08-12
Language : English

DESCRIPTION:

He is passionate about .NET and WPF and spends his free time writing articles and blog posts about WPF and the MVVM. He hosts on his blogs articles and blog posts about WPF and MVVM, you can visit his blog at this address: blog.raffaeu. He is Microsoft Certified (MCAD, MCSD, MCTS SQL and Sharepoint). About the AuthorRaffaele Garofalo is a .NET software architect who builds Line-of-Business applications for a living

He is passionate about .NET and WPF and spends his free time writing articles and blog posts about WPF and the MVVM. He is Microsoft Certified (MCAD, MCSD, MCTS SQL and Sharepoint). Raffaele Garofalo is a .NET software architect who builds Line-of-Business applications for a living. He hosts on his blogs articles and blog posts about WPF and MVVM, you can visit his blog at this address: blog.raffaeu

Create rich, flexible, and maintainable line-of-business applications with the MVVM design patternSimplify and improve business application development by applying the MVVM pattern to Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) and Microsoft(R) Silverlight(R) 4. With this hands-on guide, you'll use MVVM with data binding, commands, and behaviors to create user interfaces loosely coupled to business logic. MVVM is ideal for .NET developers working with WPF and Silverlight—whether or not you have exper

Worth 12 Bucks T Anderson If you are looking for in-depth and thorough coverage of MVVM, then I would say look elsewhere. If you are looking for a good introductory overview of the Line of Business applications, then this book is for you.O'reilly had the book listed at 250 pages, Amazon at 224. Including the index it is at 201, so it is a very short read. On the other hand, it is a very cheap book.I liked that t. "Architectural book that is not deep enough" according to Steven Hong. The book focuses on Domain Driven Design but does not go deep enough for an architecture-focused book. There are some useful bits for beginners, but an experienced developer/architect will want more details. The example code is well organized and good to use as a reference though. The author definitely put some effort into the project. I would have liked to see the book more focused on . Christian Sandoval said Maybe the title is incorrect. Let me transcribe some lines written by the author in the chapter 6:"the purpose of this book is to give you the guidelines for implementing a LOB application using the MVVM pattern - explaining how these mechanisms work on WPF or Silverlight is beyond the scope of this book" (page 1Maybe the title is incorrect Christian Sandoval Let me transcribe some lines written by the author in the chapter 6:"the purpose of this book is to give you the guidelines for implementing a LOB application using the MVVM pattern - explaining how these mechanisms work on WPF or Silverlight is beyond the scope of this book" (page 149).continues:" but if you don't know these concepts in depth, especially DataTemplate and DataBinding, I. 9).continues:" but if you don't know these concepts in depth, especially DataTemplate and DataBinding, I

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