Related Titles
- Full Description
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Introducing Silverlight 4 brings you up to speed with version 4 of Silverlight quickly and efficiently. The book builds off your understanding of the basics of .NET coding and WPF, allowing your journey to Silverlight 4 proficiency to be as quick and painless as possible. The text highlights where coding techniques are similar to other, more established areas of the .NET framework. Likewise, when your existing coding habits lead you to a syntax or conceptual gotcha, the text points that out, too.
This book provides you with fast-track coverage of all the most important elements of the Silverlight 4 technology ranging from XAML to standard controls, from dealing with media to networking, from testing to deployment. It also reveals features introduced with Silverlight 4 and offers guidance on how to best utilize them. The book concludes with a pair of fully worked sample applications for you to follow through, because nothing reinforces your understanding of how concepts fit together as much as looking at finished code.
It is assumed that readers are already be comfortable with the workings of the .NET framework. Knowledge of Expression Blend is useful, but not mandatory: youll learn the Blend techniques that you need to know as you go through the book. By the end, you will have followed a sound, concise path to mastery of Silverlight 4.
What youll learn
- Migrate your existing .NET skills to Silverlight 4 as quickly as possible
- Learn everything you need to know to start developing quality Silverlight 4 applications with confidence
- Explore worked case studies showing techniques and best practices in a code-heavy style that you can relate to
- Understand the latest developments in Silverlight 4, including H.264 protected content, right-click event handling, a new printing API, and support for the Managed Extensibility Framework
Who this book is for
This book is for .NET developers, whether they are previewing .NET 4.0, already using .NET 3.5, or are in the process of migrating up from .NET 2.0. The aim is to ease people's migration paths as much as possible, so the text includes notes to highlight important features of .NET 3.5 and 4.0 that people need to be aware of and also to highlight where Silverlights working and syntax differs substantially from that of WPF.
- Table of Contents
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Table of Contents
- Introducing Silverlight
- Silverlight Concepts
- Silverlight User Interface Controls
- Media Integration
- Network Communication
- Working with Data
- Extending User Experience of LoB Applications
- Styling and Templating
- Graphics
- Animation
- Advanced Silverlight Features
- Threading in Silverlight
- WCF RIA Services and Silverlight for Mobile
- Dynamic Languages and Dynamic NET for Silverlight
- Security
- Testing and Debugging
- Packaging and Deploying Silverlight Applications
- Source Code/Downloads
- Errata
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If you think that you've found an error in this book, please let us know about it. You will find any confirmed erratum below, so you can check if your concern has already been addressed.
On page Source Code:
The source code for Ch3, Ch8 and Ch16 were out of date. Building them resulted in this meesage:
"This application was created for an expired beta release of Silverlight. Please contact the owner of this application and have them
upgrade their application using an official release of Silverlight.






