I've made a few small updates to some of the classes to include non-DB mapped items. Basically similar to javascript's promises - load the data when you need it. It allows me to include the ship class object, world object and interesting things like that in the class to make the UI a lot easier to deal with.
Also added the initial pivot table for the view, not that it actually does anything yet, but hey, I've got placeholders!
3 comments:
What GUI are you using?
This is a UWP program (Universal Windows Program), using C# and XAML for the markup. There's a post where you can view the source code - it's on GitHub.
XAML is an interesting markup language that is, at the moment at any rate, Windows only. It has a lot of power that I am not really using, but databinding is built in (even if I am not really doing it the right way, but I'm okay with that :) )
Basically the 'view' is XAML which, like many markup languages, is full of brackets. The view has a code page attached (or if you got fancy and really used MVVM, a router and controller) where the actual code happens.
Backend is SQLite. I wanted to try and do a code-first program where the program maintains the database. Go back far enough in this blog and I've outlined a bit of that.
And I'm using Visual Studio for the development.
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