More articles on Visual State Manager
Karen Corby is the Program Manager who worked with the Expression Blend team in developing the Visual State Manager feature. Karen has written four excellent and comprehensive blog posts (starting here) which explain the motivation for VSM, everything you can do with VSM and how it works under the covers, and how to build and skin a custom control. Even if you won't be writing your own custom control, this is highly recommended material on the subject from someone who designs the platform itself.
Below I've shamelessly copied out Karen's further reading section so we have a good set of links in one place:
- Karen Corby's VSM Posts (Program Manager for Silverlight)
- Christian Schormann’s Blog (Group Program Manager for Expression Blend)
- Steve White’s video tutorials (Program Manager for Expression Blend)
- Celso Gomes’s tutorials (Designer for Expression Blend)
- Tim Heuer’s Blog (Senior Program Manager on the .NET Developer Platform)
- Scott Guthrie’s Blog (Corporate Vice President of the Developer Division)
- Jesse Liberty's tutorials (Senior Program Manager on the .NET Developer Platform)
-Steve White
Comments
Anonymous
July 11, 2008
Karen Corby is the Program Manager who worked with the Expression Blend team in developing the VisualAnonymous
July 11, 2008
Karen Corby is the Program Manager who worked with the Expression Blend team in developing the VisualAnonymous
July 14, 2008
Fons Sonnemans with RollMenu, Frank LaVigne with Community Megaphone SL Map, Martin Mihaylov on LINQAnonymous
July 15, 2008
В SL 2 Beta 2 добавлен значимый функционал по управлению состоянием и переходами внутри контролов - этоAnonymous
July 27, 2008
This post will try to showcase an updated list of useful (and free!) training material available forAnonymous
August 22, 2008
In this tutorial I will show you how to edit the ControlTemplate of one of our controls - the sliderAnonymous
October 14, 2008
As you might have heard , we just released Silverlight 2 , and with it the first version of the SilverlightAnonymous
October 30, 2008
The Blend 2 Service Pack 1 contains a secret ingredient that can be activated by installing the WPF ToolkitAnonymous
November 02, 2008
Wow if you do WPF work in Blend you need to check this out as soon as possible.. Quoting The Expression Design and Blend team blog: "Thursday, October 30, 2008 2:23 PM xprblog Blend 2 SP1 + WPF Toolkit = Visual State Manager for WPF The Blend 2 ServiceAnonymous
November 04, 2008
Now that the Visual State Manager (VSM) is part of the WPFToolKit, I thought I’d show a basic exampleAnonymous
June 15, 2009
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