.NET component and application framework maker
Developer Express will place a greater emphasis on Silverlight and Windows
Presentation Foundation (WPF) this year, according to its 2010 road map,
announced on Tuesday.
DevExpress' Silverlight components will deliver full
design-time support for Visual Studio 2010 and Expression Blend 3. Upcoming
Silverlight 3 controls will include charting, data editing and a scheduler. A Silverlight
4 printing control will also be introduced.
"We feel we are late to the party, but then again,
Silverlight is changing a lot," said DevExpress CTO Julian Bucknall. Aside
from controls, the company is integrating Silverlight into its eXpressApp Framework,
he added.
Some of its upcoming WPF controls will include final
versions of DevExpress' pivot grid and layout manager, data editor, ribbon,
report view, and scheduler.
DevExpress' embrace of Silverlight and WPF comes at the
expense of Windows Forms development. Bucknall said that WinForms controls are
being deemphasized, but development will continue with more chart types, VS
2010 and Client Profile support for controls, as well as new user interface
styles to match the appearance of Windows 7 and Office 2010.
VCL (Visual Component Library) controls will be
likewise updated with additional views and similar user interface options for
the Microsoft stack.
DevExpress will continue to forge ahead to update its
existing ASP.NET controls, and it will begin to deliver new controls that
exploit the new capabilities that will be introduced by .NET 4.0, Bucknall
said. He is being more circumspect about developing components for ASP.NET's
Model-View-Controller pattern, but the company will introduce a navigation bar
and tab control nonetheless.
Lastly, new editions of the company's next IDE
productivity tools, including CodeRush and Refactor Pro, will be released later
this year around the time that VS 2010 ships, Bucknall said. "There were
big changes in Visual Studio 2010," he added.
By David Worthington
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.NET component and application framework maker
Developer Express will place a greater emphasis on Silverlight and Windows
Presentation Foundation (WPF) this year, according to its 2010 road map,
announced on Tuesday.
DevExpress' Silverlight components will deliver full
design-time support for Visual Studio 2010 and Expression Blend 3. Upcoming
Silverlight 3 controls will include charting, data editing and a scheduler. A Silverlight 4 printing control will also be introduced.
"We feel we are late to the party, but then again,
Silverlight is changing a lot," said DevExpress CTO Julian Bucknall. Aside
from controls, the company is integrating Silverlight into its eXpressApp
Framework, he added.
Some of its upcoming WPF controls will include final
versions of DevExpress' pivot grid and layout manager, data editor, ribbon,
report view, and scheduler.
DevExpress' embrace of Silverlight and WPF comes at the
expense of Windows Forms development. Bucknall said that WinForms controls are
being deemphasized, but development will continue with more chart types, VS 2010 and Client Profile support for controls, as well as new user interface
styles to match the appearance of Windows 7 and Office 2010.
VCL (Visual Component Library) controls will be
likewise updated with additional views and similar user interface options for
the Microsoft stack.
DevExpress will continue to forge ahead to update its
existing ASP.NET controls, and it will begin to deliver new controls that
exploit the new capabilities that will be introduced by .NET 4.0 , Bucknall
said. He is being more circumspect about developing components for ASP.NET's
Model-View-Controller pattern, but the company will introduce a navigation bar
and tab control nonetheless.
Lastly, new editions of the company's next IDE
productivity tools, including CodeRush and Refactor Pro, will be released later
this year around the time that VS 2010 ships, Bucknall said. "There were
big changes in Visual Studio 2010," he added.
By David Worthington on SDTimes.
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Features in Visual Studio 2010 drive tool makers
New application life-cycle management (ALM) and testing
features found in Visual Studio Team System 2010 are broadening the number of
Microsoft partners that are building tools and services for the platform.
For ALM, Microsoft introduced architectural tools for
model-driven development, a new approach to how Team Foundation Server (TFS)
handles hierarchal work items and work item linking. The company also modified
Visual Studio's licensing scheme to broaden customers' access to Visual
Studio's ALM tools.
"Work Items can have parents and children, and
work item links can have types (e.g., a bug can be linked to a test by a
'tested by' link type)," said Terry Clancy, business development manager
for Microsoft's developer tools ecosystem.
Those changes, combined with increased use of Visual Studio Team System and TFS, have led to an increase in requests from tool ISVs
to integrate with Visual Studio, he said.
Third parties are offering a crop of new process
templates for Visual Studio Team 2010 , Clancy said. "Process templates are an
emerging space and a big ALM thing. The [Visual Studio] ALM ecosystem will bear
fruit in 2010."
Those third parties include EMC Consulting, which is
releasing a new edition of Scrum for Team System; Object Consulting, which
develops Process Mentor, a suite of modifiable process templates for TFS; and
Ivar Jacobson Consulting, which produces a process template for Essential
Unified Process.
"VS 2010 is a far more sophisticated product,
which enabled us to build a far more sophisticated template," said EMC
advisory practice consultant Simon Bennett.
Microsoft is also seeing a rise in requirements
management solutions from companies like eDev, IBM Telelogic, Personify Design
and Ravenflow, Clancy said.
Visual Studio's new testing features are manual testing
support, lab environment management with automated test deployment to virtual
machines, test case management, and UI test automation.
Odin Technology, an automated software testing company,
is a new Microsoft partner that previously only supported IBM Rational and HP
Mercury products, Clancy said.
"Axe is in use in a number of high-profile
companies across the globe, albeit producing code for tools from other vendors,
e.g. HP, IBM, Micro Focus," said Duncan Brigginshaw, owner and director of
Odin.
"We're aiming to ship with VS 2010 for use with
their new testing and coded UI features. We think MS has a different and
exciting slant on the [test] market."
Fortify Software, Micro Focus, Quest Software and most
of Microsoft's component vendors (with components that work with record and
playback) are among other partners producing testing tools for VS 2010, Clancy
said.
There are also one or two partners that will be
integrating IntelliTrace, a historical debugging feature introduced in VS 2010,
into their monitoring and diagnostics products, he added.
The very nature of Microsoft's enhancements, such as
build and release management tool integrations, custom reports, and custom
templates, creates a larger "surface of engagement," said Forrester
principal analyst Jeffrey Hammond.
"Not lost on these folks is that .NET developers
still seem willing to pay for development tools and services, something that's
not always the case for other application platforms.
By David Worthington, January 18, 2010
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