PresentationBase.Core
3.4.0-preview
A lightweight MVVM implementation targeting .NET Framework 4.5, .NET Standard 2.0 and .NET 5.0.
See the version list below for details.
Install-Package PresentationBase.Core -Version 3.4.0-preview
dotnet add package PresentationBase.Core --version 3.4.0-preview
<PackageReference Include="PresentationBase.Core" Version="3.4.0-preview" />
paket add PresentationBase.Core --version 3.4.0-preview
Take a look at the Quick start in the wiki. Here are some basic examples:
ViewModels with bindable properties
public class AwesomeViewModel : ViewModel
{
private string _name;
public string Name
{
get => _name;
set => SetProperty(ref _name, value);
}
}
... and with property validation
public class AwesomeViewModel : ViewModel
{
private string _name;
public string Name
{
get => _name;
set => SetProperty(ref _name, value, NameValidation);
}
private IEnumerable<string> NameValidation(string value)
{
if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(value))
yield return "Name cannot be null or empty!";
else if (value == "sungaila")
yield return "Name cannot be stupid!";
}
}
ViewModel collections
public class AwesomeViewModel : ViewModel
{
public ObservableViewModelCollection<ChildViewModel> Children { get; }
public AwesomeViewModel()
{
Children = new ObservableViewModelCollection<ChildViewModel>(this);
Children.Add(new ChildViewModel { Nickname = "Blinky" });
Children.Add(new ChildViewModel { Nickname = "Pinky" });
Children.Add(new ChildViewModel { Nickname = "Inky" });
Children.Add(new ChildViewModel { Nickname = "Clyde" });
}
}
Commands
Your command can be defined anywhere you want (as long as its assembly is referenced by the application). Please note that a parameterless constructor (or none at all) is needed.
public class AlertCommand : ViewModelCommand<AwesomeViewModel>
{
public override void Execute(AwesomeViewModel parameter)
{
System.Windows.MessageBox.Show("You just clicked that button.");
}
public override bool CanExecute(AwesomeViewModel parameter)
{
return parameter.Name != "John Doe";
}
}
... and async commands
public class AlertCommandAsync : ViewModelCommandAsync<AwesomeViewModel>
{
protected override async Task ExecutionAsync(AwesomeViewModel parameter)
{
await Task.Run(() =>
{
System.Threading.Thread.Sleep(2000);
System.Windows.MessageBox.Show("You clicked that button two seconds ago.");
});
}
}
Take a look at the Quick start in the wiki. Here are some basic examples:
ViewModels with bindable properties
public class AwesomeViewModel : ViewModel
{
private string _name;
public string Name
{
get => _name;
set => SetProperty(ref _name, value);
}
}
... and with property validation
public class AwesomeViewModel : ViewModel
{
private string _name;
public string Name
{
get => _name;
set => SetProperty(ref _name, value, NameValidation);
}
private IEnumerable<string> NameValidation(string value)
{
if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(value))
yield return "Name cannot be null or empty!";
else if (value == "sungaila")
yield return "Name cannot be stupid!";
}
}
ViewModel collections
public class AwesomeViewModel : ViewModel
{
public ObservableViewModelCollection<ChildViewModel> Children { get; }
public AwesomeViewModel()
{
Children = new ObservableViewModelCollection<ChildViewModel>(this);
Children.Add(new ChildViewModel { Nickname = "Blinky" });
Children.Add(new ChildViewModel { Nickname = "Pinky" });
Children.Add(new ChildViewModel { Nickname = "Inky" });
Children.Add(new ChildViewModel { Nickname = "Clyde" });
}
}
Commands
Your command can be defined anywhere you want (as long as its assembly is referenced by the application). Please note that a parameterless constructor (or none at all) is needed.
public class AlertCommand : ViewModelCommand<AwesomeViewModel>
{
public override void Execute(AwesomeViewModel parameter)
{
System.Windows.MessageBox.Show("You just clicked that button.");
}
public override bool CanExecute(AwesomeViewModel parameter)
{
return parameter.Name != "John Doe";
}
}
... and async commands
public class AlertCommandAsync : ViewModelCommandAsync<AwesomeViewModel>
{
protected override async Task ExecutionAsync(AwesomeViewModel parameter)
{
await Task.Run(() =>
{
System.Threading.Thread.Sleep(2000);
System.Windows.MessageBox.Show("You clicked that button two seconds ago.");
});
}
}
Release Notes
Added .NET 5.0 as a target framework.
Dependencies
-
.NETFramework 4.5
- No dependencies.
-
.NETStandard 2.0
- No dependencies.
-
net5.0
- No dependencies.
Used By
NuGet packages (1)
Showing the top 1 NuGet packages that depend on PresentationBase.Core:
Package | Downloads |
---|---|
PresentationBase
A lightweight MVVM implementation for WPF (Windows Presentation Foundation) targeting both .NET Framework and .NET (Core).
|
GitHub repositories
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