Course Information
Course Overview
Learn data binding with WPF
Data binding in Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) provides a simple and consistent way for apps to present and interact with data. It is is the process that establishes a connection between the app UI and the data it displays. In this course, I will take you through how to bind data in a WPF application.
You will learn,
What is data binding,
Data binding concepts
How to creating a binding,
Data flow / binding mode
Data binding triggers source updates,
Data binding components,
Binding source,
Data conversion,
Binding to a collection.
Inotifyproperychanged
Observablecollections
To take this course, you need to have
Computer
Visual studio installed
Basic understanding of C# language
Basic understanding of WPF
Basic understanding of XAML.
The source of a Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) data binding can be any CLR object. You can bind to properties, sub-properties, or indexers of a CLR object. The binding references are resolved by using either Microsoft .NET Framework reflection or an ICustomTypeDescriptor.
The data binding functionality in WPF has several advantages over traditional models, including inherent support for data binding by a broad range of properties, flexible UI representation of data, and clean separation of business logic from UI. It is a powerful feature that every WPF developer must learn. In this mechanism, the management of data is entirely separated from the way data. Data binding allows the flow of data between UI elements and data object on user interface.
Course Content
- 1 section(s)
- 9 lecture(s)
- Section 1 DATA BINDING IN WPF
What You’ll Learn
- Data Binding in WPF
Skills covered in this course
Reviews
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DDavid Guagliardo
Good definitions and simple examples. The course is very basic. I would love a section 2 on advanced topics.
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JJasper Fang
This course is great and friendly to the WPF beginner.
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MMartin Funke
I missed a Documentation beside. Especially I missed Databinding between MW an UC. I learned so much. ;-)
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RRichard Swain
Accent a little heavy, but content was great. I'll look for additional lectures by Peter Njuno.