As WPF provides a rich user interface to applications, you may want to apply the same to your existing applications. But when you have a large Windows Form application project, where you already made a large investment, you won't like to reinvest on the same to scrap it and rewrite the entire project in WPF.
In such cases, WPF interoperation with WinForms is ideal. Using this, you can embed a WPF control inside a form and leverage the additional features of WPF, wherever possible.
In the previous recipe, we learned how to host WinForm controls into a WPF application. But in this recipe, we will learn the reverse, that is, how to host a WPF composite control in a Windows Forms application. We will learn this by following some simple walkthrough steps. You can extend this procedure later to host more complex applications and controls.
This walkthrough will basically be divided into two logical parts. In the first part, we will build a WPF...