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6:48 AM
@ReedCopsey I don't know how but I see weird things.
If the app shows a dialog at startup resources are not loaded and I get errors like can't find BoolToVisibilityConverter later.
Likely I'm doing something very dumb somewhere :D
 
 
3 hours later…
10:18 AM
Morning
 
 
3 hours later…
1:23 PM
'morning Alex
 
1:54 PM
hi folks, I'm writing a relatively simple WPF app for logging temperature. I've got it setup so I can read the temperature from the serial port and log the values to a file. I'd like to be able to graph the data, updating the graph each time the temperature updates (about every 10 seconds), but I'm completely lost as to where to start with the graphing. Any help/pointers where to look?
 
Do you want to use a 3rd-party graphing library, or roll your own routine?
 
That's actually probably a pretty interesting problem. I suspect there may be an off-the-shelf solution, but I'm not entirely sure. I have't used one.
 
There are a ton.
Google for wpf chart and ....
or look at this SO question:
149
A: WPF chart controls

Gergely OroszFree tools supporting panning / zooming: Live Charts DynamicDataDisplay - a nice, open source data visualization library. Unfortunately it's not been updated since April 30, 2009. OxyPlot Free tools without built in pan / zoom support: WPF Toolkit. Supports most important 2D charts, you'll...

Personallly, I think I'd go with this one:
 
I don't mind using a third part if its free
@LynnCrumbling I saw that question, most are paid addons
 
2:28 PM
Morning, Lynn
 
2:38 PM
Hey Alex / Lynn
 
If you're going to try to do it on your own, you need to think carefully about everything that's needed. Axes? reference lines throughout the viewport? You'll need to carefully track each point. It's fairly easy to take a list of points and create the line segments (if a line graph is what you're doing), but you'll have to do all the math yourself to lay them out.
And you'll want to do that in a canvas or scrollviewer, so that you're positioning relative to that. You will definitely want to figure out exactly what you're handing the ViewModel (one point at a time, presumably?). Since you're making your own solution, start out tightly tailored to what exactly you're drawing, and then get more general if you get the hang of it and want to reuse it.
Hey Mav :)
 
@Zarenor thanks zarenor, I'm currently trying to get the "Interactive Data Display" working that Lynn suggested. doing the math for my own isn't a problem,I did something similar ages ago, though it was quite crude a certainly wasn't MVVM style
 
@Notts90 Free wpf charts: github.com/Live-Charts/Live-Charts
 
2:53 PM
yea we've mostly used Live-Charts in here.. though Microsoft IDD chart also looks similar
i think its a recent thing.. i haven't seen that before
 
Oh, wow. That looks nice.
 
3:39 PM
@Maverik hiya mav
re: IDD, used to be called DDD (Dynamic Data Display)
 
3:55 PM
OK, so tried both IDD and live charts. Live charts is a clear winner for me. Cheers
 
nice!
 
4:57 PM
Anyone here an iPhone user?
 
5:18 PM
gag cough sputter
 
Hah!
 
 
2 hours later…
6:53 PM
posted on June 18, 2019 by Matt Mitchell

With .NET Core 3.0 Preview 6 out the door, we thought it would be useful to take a brief look at the history of our infrastructure systems and the significant improvements that have been made in the last year or so. The post The Evolving Infrastructure of .NET Core appeared first on .NET Blog.

 

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