Customizing Appearance
- Create a consistent user interface appearance by using styles. It may include but not limited to applying a style automatically to all controls of a specific type;Â implementing style inheritance;Â property value precedence (order in which dependency property values are applied).
- Change the appearance of a UI element by using triggers. It may include but not limited to using multiple triggers;Â Â using property triggers; using event triggers;Â using data triggers.
- Add interactivity by using animations. It may include but not limited to creating a storyboard;Â controlling timelines;Â controlling the behavior when the animation completes; animating non-double data types;Â starting an animation from code.
- Share logical resource throughout an application. It may include but not limited to choosing where to store a resource; merging resource dictionaries;Â retrieving a resource by using procedural code.
- Change the appearance of a control by using templates. It may include but not limited to inserting a trigger inside a template; using predefined part names in a template; respecting the templated parent’s properties.
- Localize a WPF application. It may include but not limited to loading resources by locale;Â marking localizable elements;Â using culture settings in validators and converters;Â using language properties and rendering direction properties.
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