Extreme makeover: Microsoft Expression Blend
Posted by meero on December 4, 2006
Microsoft Expression has a special holiday treat for designers: The new beta of Microsoft Expression Blend is now available for download.
The Expression team has been working very hard over the past year to give Sparkle an extreme makeover. New UI, new property inspection system, better workflow for UI design tasks, and a great looking product!
From the Expression Team blog:
“What’s new in the beta?
Enhanced Properties panel UX
- Context-sensitive UX makes finding associated properties a snap
- Improved UX for event & property triggers
- Support for editing almost all WPF properties such as bitmap effects
- Built-in search to help you find properties without the need for scrolling
- Ability to bind data such as a brush resource to any property using a rich UX
- Unique value editors make it easier to set values without leaving the mouse
- New editors for collections
- A new plug-in model that 3rd-parties can use to add their own custom editors
Redesigned shell
- Improved docking and panel management
- New icons enhance usability
- Darker theme brings focus to the design workspace
Improved artboard
- Drag & drop to create elements via a rich asset gallery
- Snap to grid and snap to alignment makes it easier to layout your controls
- Enhanced context menu allows you to group into layout containers and set common layout properties
- Right-click > View XAML allows you to quickly find the associated XAML for an element
Improved resource management & control template capabilities
- Resources panel allows you to edit resource values used by your project
- Support for dragging & dropping resources between dictionaries to re-factor your project
- Built-in set of controls which are designed to be easy to edit and reconfigure
Support for Microsoft Visual Studio editing
- Shared project format with Visual Studio allows easier development-designer workflow
- Create event handlers in Expression Blend and edit your code in Visual Studio”
Give it a test drive, and send your comments.
Amir
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Posted in Interaction Design, Microsoft, Microsoft Expression, User Interface | 1 Comment »

