Making better presentation layers
- By John K. Waters
- February 14, 2003
One of the most attention-getting demos in the VSLive! exhibit hall --
particularly among young Microsoftees, who swung by to drool into their goatees
over it -- was an application put together by Infragistics's technology
evangelist, Brad McCabe. To prove that developers could achieve the look and
feel of a thick-client app with a thin-client (browser-based) implementation,
McCabe built a reference application using Infragistics's NetAdvantage ASP.NET
components for Web navigation, menu, tabs, toolbars, trees, grids and charts.
Called simply 'Expense Application,' the app involves Web services, client-side
Java scripting, XML data binding and other real-world code samples, McCabe
explained.
Infragistics makes reusable, presentation layer components for building
Microsoft .NET, COM and Java applications. In addition, the East Windsor,
N.J.-based company announced a new version of its NetAdvantage suite at the
show. NetAdvantage 2003 Vol. 1 is an integrated toolset for developing the
presentation layer for applications.
The suite will feature components for Microsoft Visual Studio .NET 2003,
Microsoft .NET Framework and Microsoft COM, and will include major feature
enhancements of the ASP.NET Grid and Visual Studio .NET 2003, McCabe said.
For his reference application, McCabe focused on the user interface and
technology examples. ''Some pages were built slightly differently to show
examples of various approaches and technologies,'' he said. ''We wanted to show
them [developers] more than just our own stuff. Microsoft is trying to build a
community, and so are we. Let's face it, times are tough and programmers need to
help programmers.''
To download the full source code and documentation of the Infragistics
reference application, please visit http://www.infragistics.com/products/thinreference.asp
Links:
For other Programmers Report articles, please go to http://www.adtmag.com/article.asp?id=6265
About the Author
John K. Waters is a freelance writer based in Silicon Valley. He can be reached
at [email protected].