ToskersCorner is a channel dedicated to beginners in C# and WPF. As a current college student, I do not qualify myself as a "professional" by any means. At the same time, I feel my content approaches beginners in a different way. Instead of just showing you what to do and vaguely saying why, my intentions are to provide emphasis in explaining the content to viewers in a perspective that would have made my past learning experiences easier. By making my video content in a modular way, I help beginners avoid the frustration of sitting/skipping through an hour long video when they only clicked it in the first place for the 10% of content it has within it. I then do a series which combines past videos in to a larger application do see all the pieces working together.
The utter disappointment I felt when my professor uploaded this exact same video onto our online class except in much horrible 144p quality and I spent so much time trying to read through the pixels only to find out the exact same video exists here on youtube. Strange how that happens
The ellipse is not a circle, it's the other way around, the CIRCLE is a special case of an ELLIPSE, where the semi-major and semi-minor axis are equal and has eccentricity equal to ZERO.
I found a similar way to do this and was wondering if there are pros or cons to this approach? I am new to wpf / xaml so am not sure. loginWindow.Visibility = Visibility.Visible; toolWindow1.Visibility = Visibility.Collapsed; toolWindow2.Visibility = Visibility.Collapsed;
First tutorial I've found that explains any of this in an intuitive way. So many others gloss over the datacontext, code-behind and namespace stuff wayyy too fast
very helpful thank you!! I have a question about this, if i have a button in my red View and i want to change from there so the green view, is there a way to do it? or can i remove the data context from the red view ? Thanks a lot for your nice tutorial!
10:09 I think binding the tooltip directly with the dictionary will throw an exception when there is no error on the property - you only show when there are errors. Ps: There is also another interface for validation INotifyOnDataErrroInfo which I think is also very powerful
Hey Toskers thanks for your video! I have a question : Can I have 2 classes "MessageCommand"? One to use with Commands with parameters and another with without parameters? What do you think about this? Thanks
Good tutorial, the only confusing part was DialogWindow : Window, IDialogWindow, but i got it eventually, since its (DataConext ) defined in the interface....it does appear like something changed between when you made this video and the updates in C#/WPF, so it has to be defined now explicitly? it was giving errors when i didnt define anything... because ContentControl doesn't appear to have a DataContext by default anymore, so i had to initialize it myself. If anyone is looking for it, just search the below commend threads, i posted it two times. Thanks again for this MVVM example, im starting to get the hang of it now!