@Sisyphe M really sorry there some misunderstanding i m actually new to WPF n silverlight so got confused between m beginner in learning this. n i just hav got new laptop by some mistak my capslock key got pressed n i wrote some line but didnt thought it will be considered as harsh
i was so busy didnt got time to come back to this chat room n continue
another scenario where services really help (again separation) is when I'm working within company infrastructure but i need to expose data to clients over internet
yeah any suggestions for good video streaming server ?
@greg Services are hosted in a server where any appllication can access it, give input to it and get relevent output like a reception
Google has services for location and weather, you open the service , give it a location name (new york) and it will give you the current weather status of new york
Services work that way
Com -> Com+ -> Dcom -> web services -> WCF -> Web API , the older to current service tech from MS
@Maverik It is a system that is used for Transfer Pricing and what it does is extract information from SAP to do some calculation for taxes and some other complicated stuff.
back on MDI topic, it's actually pretty simple. you have to manage two Controls (SurfaceControl and InnerWindowControl) and their respective ViewModel.
on control, you just have to manage scrolling/zooming as well as add/Close events
manage the list on inner windows in the surface
some work on physical to logical units transformation
and logical to physical
and finally a bit of code to manage windows DnD + resize
In graphical user interfaces, a multiple document interface or MDI is one whose windows reside under a single parent window. Such systems often allow child windows to embed other windows inside them as well, creating complex nested hierarchies. This contrasts with single document interfaces (SDI) where all windows are independent of each other.
Comparison with single document interface
In the usability community, there has been much debate about whether the multiple document or single document interface is preferable. Software companies have used both interfaces with mixed responses...
@AndréSilva - Coincidentally I'm the one working on the MDI project :P I've been working on it since October
My advice would be to forget the WPFMDI plugin unless you want to get your hands dirty and modify most of the code
It's basically not supported any more, and is full of bugs. In hindsight it would have made more sense if I just created MDI functionality myself, as I've ended up changing most of the plugin's code
But then again I had never even heard of WPF in October, so I doubt I would have managed
Didn't have much of a choice unfortunately :/ This plugin was the only one which satisfied my requirements. I had looked into avalondock too, but it wasnt what I needed
I'm not so sure. Everything which can be done with SQL should be possible with my application. Since it's strictly 100% GUI based, I cant think of another way
For example what I'm working on right now is combining sub-selects with joins. Users can use my application to join 1000 tables if they like, as well as specify subselects within the filters
And it can be done very easily. All you'd need would be time to join those 1000 tables. Whereas with SQL you'd need time and a new set of eyes when you're done
And i'm aware that users would never actually need to join 1000 tables, but since this is a scientific approach, one may argue that it's possible to do that with SQL. Hence, my application needs to do that too
again you're linking view to model/viewmodel stuff
there's always a way to do things that doesn't involve windows!
here's an idea: did you consider using ListViews as "windows" ?
ListViewItem drag and drops would have provided you with FK links for example
while ListView DnD would have given you tables to throw on "Surface"
it wouldn't have been as free form drag and drop (would have snapped to some form of grid) but you could have avoided the entire mdi thing
the concept of mdi is there.. but no windows
of course i'm talking pretty generic here as i dont know the specifics but the point remains, you could have actually done things wihtout use of windows :)
I'm sure there are some other ways, but I can't think of any that would have been better. For example in your approach, how would users select which fields to include in the final query? With a window, you can just list the fields as checkboxes, and the window itself would represent a table.
I am new at WPF and xaml, but still as I was reading about this is tricky thing. The thing what I want to change on mouseover is the label foreground color, but the label is inside of the button content.
Everything should be done by styles, without C#.
<Button Name="Home_Button" Height="50" ...
Though we've exchanged a few emails over the years, I've only met Joel Spolsky once, back in 2005, and since he was surrounded by a protective layer of adoring fanboys we didn't get to chat much. So it was a … Continue reading →