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MVVM Survival Guide for Enterprise Architectures in Silverlight and WPF

You're reading from   MVVM Survival Guide for Enterprise Architectures in Silverlight and WPF If you're using Silverlight and WPF, then employing the MVVM pattern can make a powerful difference to your projects, reducing code and bugs in one. This book is an invaluable resource for serious developers.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2012
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849683425
Length 490 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Toc

Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

MVVM Survival Guide for Enterprise Architectures in Silverlight and WPF
Credits
Foreword
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Presentation Patterns FREE CHAPTER 2. Introduction to MVVM 3. Northwind – Foundations 4. Northwind—Services and Persistence Ignorance 5. Northwind—Commands and User Inputs 6. Northwind—Hierarchical View Model and IoC 7. Dialogs and MVVM 8. Workflow-based MVVM Applications 9. Validation 10. Using Non-MVVM Third-party Controls 11. MVVM Application Performance MVVM Frameworks
Binding at a Glance Index

Appendix A. MVVM Frameworks

By Muhammad Shujaat Siddiqi

The XAML community has been blessed with extraordinary developers who are always willing to volunteer their time. There are a myriad of MVVM frameworks available and it is a tough decision which one to choose from. This is because it is such a core architectural decision that it is nearly impossible to change the underlying framework in later stages of development without extreme risks. Here, MVVM Light Toolkit is our personal favorite.

Name

Author

License

MVVM Light Toolkit

Laurent Bugnion

MIT

Prism

Microsoft Patterns and Practices Team

Microsoft Patterns and Practices License (Custom)

Calcium

Daniel Vaughan

BSD

Caliburn

Rob Eisenberg

MIT

Cinch

Sacha Barber

MS-PL

Catel

Geert Van Horrik

MS-PL

As a guideline, we should be looking at how any particular framework will help us in incorporating MVVM in our design without sacrificing other enterprise architecture design requirements. We should also look at how loosely coupled it is with its own features. If a framework supports all these features but it forces you to use a particular Dependency Injection mechanism then you would definitely have to think about it. This would also help us in picking and choosing different features from different frameworks. It would be easier if they allow such choices. The base feature set to look for is as follows:

  • INotifyPropertyChanged Implmementation (for base view model)

  • ICommand Implementation

  • Messenger (Mediator)

  • Dialog support

  • Validation (for base view model)

  • Supported platforms (WPF, SL, WP, WinRT)

  • Project templates and quick starts

  • Documentation and active online community

In addition to the preceding features , these frameworks have also been incorporating other features (for example, logging) in order to be a complete enterprise application framework. You can also use those features when comparing these frameworks but since they are not particularly related to MVVM, we haven't discussed them here.

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