![]() ![]() we can use this event, (usually an empty method pre written for you in ) which we can use to instantiate stuff from the isolated storage. When the app is launched, the Launching Event is fired. However anywhere in the app, when the user presses the Start Button and/or triggers a Launcher or a chooser ( such as ‘”send an SMS”, “send an email”) etc, Your app’s state is saved and your app is put to sleep.įollowing are the main events that we can use in our app to make our app feel as if it were really running in the background Well this does mean that we do get to write event handlers for events such as application launched etc. When we do this, (from the programmer’s perspective), a new instance of our application is created. The app that you, me and many more developers will write will need to be launched from either the start experience or application list. Well in order to answer this question, we need to understand how an app will live on the phone ( the Windows Phone off course ) ![]() So, No Multi tasking, What does that mean for us developers? And Frankly speaking off, they have done a decent job. ![]() With Windows phone 7, what MSFT promised was no sluggish interfaces and apps that consume various data service and provide all the information you need in one place. Well what If we say that we will need multi tasking and will use it judiciously? well AFAIK, not Third party app multi tasking will be available in V1 ( Not sure, if MSFT intends to publish an OTA update to add multi tasking later ) Once an user sees that s/he will definitely say that “Windows Phone 7 Sucks!, It is very slow and sluggish”. The reason provided was that too many apps running in the background may make the app in foreground run slowly. ![]() What was made clear at Mix’10 was that third party apps in Windows Phone 7 wont be able to multi task. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |