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Microsoft Windows Workflow Foundation 4.0 Cookbook
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In this task we will create our first workflow to print "Hello Workflow" to the console application.
Create a Workflow Console Application project:
After starting Visual Studio 2010, select File | New Project. A dialog is presented, as shown in the following screenshot. Under the Visual C# section, select Workflow, and choose Workflow Console Application. Name the project HelloWorkflow
. Name the solution Chapter01
and make sure to create a directory for the solution.
Author the workflow program:
First, drag a Sequence
activity to the designer from Toolbox, next drag a WriteLine activity into the Sequence activity. Finally, input "Hello Workflow" in the expression box of the WriteLine
activity. We can see in the following screenshot:
Run it:
Press Ctrl+F5 to run the project without debugging. The result is as shown in the following screenshot:
When we press Ctrl+F5, Visual Studio saves the current project, and then it runs the project from the Main
method in the Program.cs
file.
WorkflowInvoker.Invoke(new Workflow1());
The preceding statement starts the workflow. After the workflow starts running, the WriteLine
activity prints the "Hello Workflow" to the Console Application.
The workflow we created in WF Designer is actually an XML file. We can open Workflow1.xaml
with an XML editor to check it.
Right-click on Workflow1.xaml
then click Open With…, and choose XML Editor to open Workflow1
.xaml
as an XML file.
All XAML files will be compiled to .dll
or .exe
files. That is why when we press Ctrl+F5, the program just runs like a normal C# program.
So far, there are no officially published WF4 Designer add-ins for Visual Studio 2008. We need a copy of Visual Studio 2010 installed on our computer to use WF4 Designer, otherwise we can only create workflows by imperative code or by writing pure XAML files.
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