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Showing posts from September, 2025

Build a Responsive Kanban Board Application in WPF using C# and MVVM 🚀

Are you looking for a practical WPF project to improve your C#, MVVM, and desktop application development skills? In this series, we will build a Responsive Kanban Board Application from scratch using WPF, C#, and MVVM architecture . This project is inspired by modern task management tools like Trello and helps you understand how real-world desktop applications are designed and developed. Why Build a Kanban Board in WPF? Many developers learn WPF concepts individually: Buttons TextBoxes Data Binding Commands Collections But when building a real application, you need to combine everything together. A Kanban Board project helps you learn: ✅ Real UI design ✅ MVVM architecture ✅ Dynamic data handling ✅ User interaction ✅ Drag & Drop functionality ✅ Command-based programming ✅ Reusable WPF components What You Will Build in This WPF Project We create a responsive Kanban Board where users can manage tasks visually. The application contains: 📌 Multiple ...

What is XAML in WPF? Explained with Simple Examples

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In this article, we’ll dive into one of the core building blocks of WPF — XAML. We’ll explore how it works and why it plays such an important role in building modern desktop applications. What is XAML? XAML stands for eXtensible Application Markup Language. It’s a markup language used to design the user interface in WPF applications. XAML allows developers and designers to work separately, making the code cleaner and easier to manage. Think of it as HTML for WPF apps. XAML Syntax XAML uses XML-style syntax. Every UI element is an XML tag. Attributes define properties like height, width, and content. You can also nest elements inside others to create more complex layouts. For example, placing a TextBlock inside a Grid layout. <Grid>     <TextBlock Text="Hello, WPF World!"                 Width="200"                 Height="50"              ...