WPF Text Blog
A blog on WinFX: Windows Presentation Foundation text and flow layout.
May 2006 - Posts
MSDN TV Demo Part 1 Continued: Creating an Easy and Enjoyable Reading Experience in WPF
23 May 06 03:10 AM
|
text
|
1 Comments
Hi world! I’ve grabbed hold of Chris Han ’s blogging coattails and will be posting some info about our MSDN TV Demo. Specifically about the built in (free!!) flow and dynamic layout capabilities. Hyphenation and Optimal Paragraph Hyphenation is an age
Read More...
MSDN TV Demo Part 1: Creating an OpenType menu in WPF
07 May 06 02:34 AM
|
text
|
3 Comments
Hi, my name is Chris Han, I’m the program manager in Windows Presentation Foundation working on text and globalization. You might have seen our recent MSDN TV episode “Overview of text and flow layout in Windows Presentation Foundation” where I demonstrated
Read More...
New York Times 'Times Reader' built on WPF
01 May 06 05:23 PM
|
text
|
3 Comments
Something we've been really excited about in the WPF team is our partnership with New York Times and the development of their WPF based news reader app. Bill Gates and NYTimes chairman, Arthur Sulzberger Jr, made a joint announcment Friday: NYTimes c|net
Read More...
Search
This Blog
Home
Email
Tags
.net 3.0 windows update
animating text
ClearType
decorative text
DirectWrite
dot net solutions
flow document
formattedtext
Indic support
Lab
languages
Mac
microsoft surface
MIX
new york times
outline text
pixel snapping
Safari
seema
silverlight
table
text rendering
Tim Sneath British Library WPF apps
times reader
TypeCon
vista
wikipedia explorer
wpf
WPF 3.5
WPF 4.0
Archives
October 2009 (1)
September 2009 (2)
August 2009 (4)
July 2009 (1)
June 2009 (1)
April 2009 (2)
January 2009 (1)
December 2008 (1)
August 2008 (1)
July 2008 (1)
September 2007 (1)
August 2007 (1)
June 2007 (1)
May 2007 (3)
April 2007 (1)
March 2007 (1)
February 2007 (1)
January 2007 (3)
November 2006 (1)
October 2006 (2)
September 2006 (1)
August 2006 (1)
July 2006 (1)
June 2006 (3)
May 2006 (3)
March 2006 (1)
Syndication
RSS 2.0
Atom 1.0