Customizing and Managing Multithreaded Applications with C# 2010


Overview/Description
Target Audience
Prerequisites
Expected Duration
Lesson Objectives
Course Number


Overview/Description
This course examines how .NET allows you to customize the look and feel of an application based on user culture. It also demonstrates how applications can manage multiple tasks through the use of asynchronous programming patterns and the Task Parallel Library, or TPL. Specific areas covered include UI customization, animation, localization, various application multithreading options, and Parallel LINQ Queries or PLINQ. This course is one of a series in the SkillSoft learning path that covers the objectives for the Technology Specialist (TS): Windows Applications Development with Microsoft .NET Framework 4 exam (70-511). Passing this exam will earn the learner the MCTS: .NET Framework 4, Windows Applications certification.

Target Audience
All organizations or individual consultants who are using or intend to use the .NET Framework 4 with Visual Studio 2010 and C# 2010 to develop Windows applications; corporate employees, consultants, and university or college students who are preparing for the associated Technology Specialist (TS): Windows Applications Development with Microsoft .NET Framework 4 exam (70-511).

Prerequisites
A good knowledge of C# 2010 and familiarity with Visual Studio, having a minimum one year’s experience working with these technologies.

Expected Duration (hours)
3.5

Lesson Objectives

Customizing and Managing Multithreaded Applications with C# 2010

  • use styles to design the look and feel of UI controls
  • use templates to change the appearance of controls
  • create triggers
  • use animation in a WPF application
  • recognize the process for globalizing a Windows application
  • localize Windows forms using Visual Studio
  • localize elements in a WPF application
  • customize the UI of a WPF application
  • localize a WPF application
  • localize a Windows Form
  • use animation in a WPF application
  • recognize how to program with timer callbacks
  • describe the concept of multithreading and recognize how to make thread safe calls
  • recognize characteristics of the event-based asynchronous pattern
  • recognize how to perform data parallelism
  • implement the task class and task parallelism
  • run and cancel PLINQ queries
  • perform a drag and drop operation in Windows forms
  • implement drag and drop in WPF
  • recognize multithreading in Windows applications and describe asynchronous programming patterns
  • describe parallel programming
  • perform drag and drop operations
  • Course Number:
    sd_wdcs_a05_it_enus