
A C# developer's book and eBook guide to the features and programming interfaces of Windows Workflow Foundation
K. Scott Allen
Yearly subscription | £150.00 | Monthly subscription | £14.99 |
Overview of Programming Windows Workflow Foundation: Practical WF Techniques and Examples using XAML and C#
- Add event-driven workflow capabilities to your .NET applications.
- Highlights the libraries, services and internals programmers need to know
- Builds a practical "bug reporting" workflow solution example app
[ Detailed Information ]
Language : EnglishPaperback : 252 pages [ 235mm x 191mm ]
Release Date : December 2006
ISBN : 1904811213
ISBN 13 : 978-1-904811-21-3
Author(s) : K. Scott Allen
Topics and Technologies : All Books, Microsoft Development , Enterprise, Microsoft, .NET
[ Book Links ]
[ In Detail ]
|
Windows Workflow Foundation (WF) is a technology for defining, executing, and managing workflows. It is part of the .NET Framework 3.0 and will be available natively in the Windows Vista operating system.
Windows Workflow Foundation might be the most significant piece of middleware to arrive on the Windows platform since COM+ and the Distributed Transaction Coordinator. The difference is, not every application needs a distributed transaction, but nearly every application does have a workflow encoded inside it.
In this book, K Scott Allen, author of renowned .NET articles at www.odetocode.com, provides you with all the information needed to develop successful products with Windows Workflow.
From the basics of how Windows Workflow can solve the difficult problems inherent in workflow solutions, through authoring workflows in code, learning about the base activity library in Windows Workflow and the different types of workflow provided, and on to building event-driven workflows using state machines, workflow communications, and finally rules and conditions in Windows Workflow, this book will give you the in-depth information you need. Throughout the book, an example "bug reporting" workflow system is developed, showcasing the technology and techniques used.
A fast-paced and practical developer's road map to working with Windows WF, from compilation to the base activity library to runtime services.
What you will learn from this book :
- Create an example "bug reporting" workflow solution using the techniques and skills gained from each chapter
- Understand what Windows WF is, and what it can do for you
- Learn about the runtime services available in Windows WF
- Author workflows with C#, and with XAML, the extensible application markup language
- Use the workflow compiler to better understand how WF uses code generation to produce classes from workflow markup
- Combine generated workflow code with our hand-written code to produce a workflow type
- Learn about the events fired by the workflow runtime during the life of a workflow instance
- Build workflows that accept parameters and communicate with a host process by invoking methods and listening for events
- Learn about each activity in the Windows WF base activity library; the control flow activities, communication activities, and transaction-oriented activities
- Learn about web service activities, rule-centric activities, and state activities
- Creating custom activities using both a compositional approach and a derivation approach
- Master the execution context, a vital ingredient for creating any robust activity
- Learn about the workflow runtime, workflow diagnostics, and the out-of-the-box services provided for WF by Microsoft.
- Using scheduling services, persistence services, and tracking services
- Select and configure the services needed for a wide variety of scenarios and environments
- Use local services for communication with a host process, and web service activities for communication across a network
- Uncover the queuing service used behind the scenes of a workflow to coordinate and deliver messages
- Create rules and conditions in Windows Workflow Foundation
- Understand the role of business rules in software development and see examples of how Windows WF's rules engine can take away some of the burden of rule development
Approach
Fast-paced and to-the-point, this book takes you through the important topics of Windows WF development with clear explanations and practical example code. The book's selection of topics is driven by what the working developer needs to know. It is neither a comprehensive reference to the whole WF architecture, nor a strategy guide to the complete application development lifecycle. It's just what you as a C# developer need to know to use WF in your applications.
Who this book is written for
This book is for .NET developers who want to enhance their applications with flexible workflow capabilities using Microsoft Windows Workflow Foundation. The author assumes that you have read other texts on the overall architecture of WF and on WF application design strategies, and instead focuses on real-work implementation issues for C# developers.

A C# developer's book and eBook guide to the features and programming interfaces of Windows Workflow Foundation
K. Scott Allen
Overview of Programming Windows Workflow Foundation: Practical WF Techniques and Examples using XAML and C#
- Add event-driven workflow capabilities to your .NET applications.
- Highlights the libraries, services and internals programmers need to know
- Builds a practical "bug reporting" workflow solution example app
- eBook available as PDF, ePub and Mobi downloads and also on PacktLib


With the multi-format deal, you receive access to the book on PacktLib
for free.
PacktLib allows you to access and search across Packt's entire library of over 400 books, finding practical solutions to your searches at the click of a button.
[ Detailed Information ]
Language : EnglishPaperback : 252 pages [ 235mm x 191mm ]
Release Date : December 2006
ISBN : 1904811213
ISBN 13 : 978-1-904811-21-3
Author(s) : K. Scott Allen
Topics and Technologies : All Books, Microsoft Development , Enterprise, Microsoft, .NET
[ Book Links ]
[ In Detail ]
|
Windows Workflow Foundation (WF) is a technology for defining, executing, and managing workflows. It is part of the .NET Framework 3.0 and will be available natively in the Windows Vista operating system.
Windows Workflow Foundation might be the most significant piece of middleware to arrive on the Windows platform since COM+ and the Distributed Transaction Coordinator. The difference is, not every application needs a distributed transaction, but nearly every application does have a workflow encoded inside it.
In this book, K Scott Allen, author of renowned .NET articles at www.odetocode.com, provides you with all the information needed to develop successful products with Windows Workflow.
From the basics of how Windows Workflow can solve the difficult problems inherent in workflow solutions, through authoring workflows in code, learning about the base activity library in Windows Workflow and the different types of workflow provided, and on to building event-driven workflows using state machines, workflow communications, and finally rules and conditions in Windows Workflow, this book will give you the in-depth information you need. Throughout the book, an example "bug reporting" workflow system is developed, showcasing the technology and techniques used.
A fast-paced and practical developer's road map to working with Windows WF, from compilation to the base activity library to runtime services.
What you will learn from this book :
- Create an example "bug reporting" workflow solution using the techniques and skills gained from each chapter
- Understand what Windows WF is, and what it can do for you
- Learn about the runtime services available in Windows WF
- Author workflows with C#, and with XAML, the extensible application markup language
- Use the workflow compiler to better understand how WF uses code generation to produce classes from workflow markup
- Combine generated workflow code with our hand-written code to produce a workflow type
- Learn about the events fired by the workflow runtime during the life of a workflow instance
- Build workflows that accept parameters and communicate with a host process by invoking methods and listening for events
- Learn about each activity in the Windows WF base activity library; the control flow activities, communication activities, and transaction-oriented activities
- Learn about web service activities, rule-centric activities, and state activities
- Creating custom activities using both a compositional approach and a derivation approach
- Master the execution context, a vital ingredient for creating any robust activity
- Learn about the workflow runtime, workflow diagnostics, and the out-of-the-box services provided for WF by Microsoft.
- Using scheduling services, persistence services, and tracking services
- Select and configure the services needed for a wide variety of scenarios and environments
- Use local services for communication with a host process, and web service activities for communication across a network
- Uncover the queuing service used behind the scenes of a workflow to coordinate and deliver messages
- Create rules and conditions in Windows Workflow Foundation
- Understand the role of business rules in software development and see examples of how Windows WF's rules engine can take away some of the burden of rule development
Approach
Fast-paced and to-the-point, this book takes you through the important topics of Windows WF development with clear explanations and practical example code. The book's selection of topics is driven by what the working developer needs to know. It is neither a comprehensive reference to the whole WF architecture, nor a strategy guide to the complete application development lifecycle. It's just what you as a C# developer need to know to use WF in your applications.
Who this book is written for
This book is for .NET developers who want to enhance their applications with flexible workflow capabilities using Microsoft Windows Workflow Foundation. The author assumes that you have read other texts on the overall architecture of WF and on WF application design strategies, and instead focuses on real-work implementation issues for C# developers.