Wish there is a book on Avalonia #14798
Replies: 7 comments 9 replies
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It's fairly similar to WPF. While there are differences, a lot of what works in WPF will work in Avalonia with only minor changes. So while I am not sure if there is an Avalonia book, there are certainly WPF ones you can use as a starting point. |
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The Avalonia community isn't big enough to commercially support the writing of a book which would take several months, still not cover the needs of everybody, and many will complain it's not video content. Several WPF books of the era were well over a thousand pages which nobody wants to read as a beginner these days. You can't master any programming concept by reading, you need sizable amounts of practice to clear up misconceptions and experiment. What's more valuable is building a core set of Avalonia fundamentals and a sense of what exists in the ecosystem so that you can look it up when you need it. When a book goes to press, it's already outdated. If there are particular concepts that are hard to understand (either in existing docs or they don't exist at all), then create an issue in https://github.com/AvaloniaUI/avalonia-docs |
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I understand why you'd like a book about Avalonia, but it's likely to come from somewhere other than the core team. Let me explain why: Time vs. Reward Accessibility Staying Current To any budding authors We ARE committed to making Avalonia easier to learn. That means fantastic documentation, helpful tutorials, and a supportive community. Let me know what specific resources would be most beneficial for you. |
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Thank you for the replies, I am appreciated. I know the team's concerns, and I will study it with my full efforts, wish that one day I can make my contribution to the project. |
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Hi everyone, I will be building a simple desktop app in C# for my company. The purpose of this app will be interfacing with and controlling a piece of test & measurement equipment. After careful consideration, I believe that the two most reasonable routes for me are WPF or Avalonia. Having a solution that is cross platform is a "nice to have" but by no means a hard requirement. The more important thing is that I get an app up and running in relatively short order. I am somewhat familiar with WPF and XAML. Ideally I would like to go the Avalonia route, since it looks like the future and WPF is a legacy platform. However, my main concern is the relative lack of documentation/tutorials/forums for Avalonia when compared with WPF, which has extensive materials available. I just don't want to bite off more than I can chew, especially considering the aggressive schedule for this app. Can anyone offer some advice or insight into the situation with regards to Avalonia literature? What has your experience been? Do you think my concern is warranted? |
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Writing a book is a lot of work... And that work does not pay well. :( Of note, most WPF books were written by Microsoft employees, cashing their regular paychecks. And then published by Microsoft press. In other words, readers were paying for somewhat "advanced" documentation. Nowadays, still the same, but no more books, videos on YouTube instead. |
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Hi everyone, the techniques used are the following The bookshelf is here https://www.lulu.com/shop/roberto-bandiera/avaloniaui/ebook/product-65rq4kp.html Hope it helps. |
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Avalonia is a powerful and amazing framework. Is there any plan to write a book on it? As a hobbyist, I cannot master it only by self-study or the articles on the Analonia website, this is upset. Maybe for a lot of hobbyists, this is a big challenge to master it.
Thank you very much.
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