I recently had a good friend of mine send me an email asking how to dynamically generate columns based on a collection of objects with the XamDataGrid. This seems like a very common task that just about all applications will probably need to do. It’s definitely not an uncommon task.
The App Builder Blog
This post will concentrate on the workspace that Blend provides when your project is in XAML.
One quick and easy way of making any application or website more usable is to identify primary actions and secondary actions. Primary actions are the most frequently used that guide the user along an intended path to complete a task.
A number of line of business applications use XamDataGrid for its rich feature set, high customizability and performance.
A quick recap: the Checkbox column is a feature that provides default setup to turn Boolean values in the jQuery grid into checkboxes.
The checkbox column (introduced with the last release, see this post on Using Checkbox Columns with the Infragistics jQuery Grid) was created to provide a ‘shortcut’ for transforming columns with Boolean values into checkboxes and mostly became reality due to the great interest in such functionality from customers (and after all it does make perfect sense).
One of the highly-anticipated features in the Entity Framework 5 is a Spatial support.
Parallel lines with varying width and spacing – they are virtually everywhere. Barcodes have a rather long history of becoming a standard for assigning data to an optical representation and it allowed for identifying a broad range of goods in stores, shipping containers and countless other items, which in turn streamlined multiple industry processes.
There are numerous scenarios when from for the sole purpose of having an effective or functional application it seems the only way to go is live – like live data, updating clients in real time.
A very common need in almost every ASP.NET web application, a UI requirement to have a button control that can display text and image.