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Anatomy of Radial Gradient Brush

WPF(Windows Presentation Foundation) and XPS (Open XML Paper Specification) supports five types of brushes. They are solid color brush, linear gradient brush, radial gradient brush, image brush, and visual brush. This posting will discuss the 'shape'
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Zoran announces XPS rendering support for printers

Sunnyvale, Calif. - January 17, 2005 - Zoran Corporation (Nasdaq: ZRAN) announced that its IPS/XPS interpreter for Microsoft’s new XPS Document format will be available to printer and multifunction peripheral (MFP) manufacturers through an Early Adopter
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Optimize XPS markup

XPS is hot, so naturally more and more applications will be generating XPS. If your application has access to the XPS Document Writer, then the easiest way to generate XPS is just print to it. But there are cases you may want to generate XPS on your own,
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Native Office Support for XPS Annouced

Office just annouced native/direct support for XPS document in Office 12. Read more about it: Jeff Bell's blog: http://blogs.msdn.com/jeff_bell/archive/2005/10/27/485937.aspx Andy Simonds's blog: http://blogs.msdn.com/andy_simonds/archive/2005/10/28/486211.asp
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The XPS (XML Paper Specification) Depot

One stop shop for XPS information
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Printing to Microsoft XPS Document Writer without showing File Save Dialog Box

If you want to use the Microsoft XPS Writer to generate a large amount of XPS Documents, or use it in a server environment, you do not want the File Save dialog box to show up. Solution: specify output file name in DOCINFO passed to StartDoc.
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DIY generation of XPS Documents

Although Microsoft has already provided two ways to generate XPS Documents, there are benefits to generate them on your own. Here is some sample Win32 code for generating XPS Fixedpage markup.
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Printing to legacy devices in Windows Presentation Foundation

In the two previous postings, we discussed about two different ways of generating XPS (XML Paper Specification) Documents, one being printing to XPS Document Writer from Win32 applications, and the other being using the new WPF (Windows Presentation Foundation)
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Creating XPS Documents from Visual, plus an insider look at an XPS Document

In the last article blogs.msdn.com/fyuan/archive/2005/09/11/463708 , we discussed how to generate XPS Documents from Win32 applications using the XPS Document Writer. The procedure is very simple, can you simply print whatever contents you have using
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Generating XPS Document from Win32 Applications: the XPS Document Writer

At Winhec 2005, Microsoft announced a new file format code named Metro (Modular Content Framework and Document Format). The name Metro has since been retired and replaced with the official name XPS which stands for XML Paper Specification. XPS is a set
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