![]() ![]() What about the intended market which is the business analyst what are we doing for those guys?įor those guys, I think what we learned is, erm, Office is the tool that the business analyst guys have and thats where any tools that for creating applications should come you know as part of that offering, as part of that product, as well as looking at I think you will start seeing, well, around the time that this show posts, the next blog post from the team talking what we are more thinkingĪbout doing, engage with the community to start making that happen. That is exactly the intent is, how do we bring a lot of the higher level things that we did in lightSwitch like quickly consuming, connecting up to data sources and services using that in a new app, I would bring those to a broader set of the VS experiencesĪcross you know WPF applications, store applications, and so forth, thats what the team is focusing on right now. So you are saying that a lot of the higher level things from LightSwitch are coming to the professional developer? The abstraction layers that we had done in prior versions of LightSwitch looking at things like scaffolding approaches where we just help you write the code that you want to write, but its your code, you can do with it what you wish, you can rip and replace frameworks and libraries that the generator used as things evolved, versus ![]()
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