Last week at //build conference, Microsoft announced what the .NET world has long anticipated - Universal Windows Platform across devices: a new paradigm allowing developers to write code once and deploy on multiple Windows platforms with just small tweaks on the user interface.
While the community was getting excited by the news, our Windows Phone and Windows 8 developer teams were working on crafting a new Universal Windows Chart control that runs both on Windows Phone 8.1 and Windows 8.1. In other words – you will be using the same control across your new Universal Apps.
We believe that a killer developer product comes with support resources just as good as the product itself. To that end we have built a developer sample application to help you get off to a fast start with UI for iOS. It contains a comprehensive set of examples with source code available for use. In this blog post, I will explain what it covers and where to find it.
Let's be honest; as developers, we have bought into a lie. Silicon Valley has told us that software is all fun and games. It's Emoji, open source and multi-billion dollar acquisitions. It's thermostats with artificial intelligence, virtual reality (again) headsets and drones. . .
As of yesterday Q1 2013 SP1 for UI for WPF and UI for Silverlight are available for download. You will find all enhancements and fixes in the detailed lists for WPF and Silverlight. Here I’ll list only a fraction to play with your interest:
Telerik AppBuilder now has a command line interface (CLI) and Sublime Text integration—meaning, you can develop iOS and Android applications with the editor that you know and love, without having to worry about managing a collection of SDKs across different operating systems. In this article, we'll walk through the process of developing a mobile app using the Telerik Platform and Sublime Text. We'll create a new project, test it on actual devices and develop apps that are app store ready.
RadChartView is just getting better and better. After implementing printing functionality and stepline series in Q1 2014, we thought that it’s time to implement yet another highly requested feature, so that your end-users can get some rest from their day-to-day work, reading and analyzing data.