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Microsoft Visio 2013 Business Process Diagramming and Validation - Second Edition

You're reading from  Microsoft Visio 2013 Business Process Diagramming and Validation - Second Edition

Product type Book
Published in Nov 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781782178002
Pages 416 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Author (1):
David Parker David Parker
Profile icon David Parker

Table of Contents (14) Chapters

Preface 1. Overview of Process Management in Microsoft Visio 2013 2. Understanding the Microsoft Visio Object Model 3. Understanding the ShapeSheet™ 4. Understanding the Validation API 5. Developing a Validation API Interface 6. Reviewing Validation Rules and Issues 7. Creating Validation Rules 8. Publishing Validation Rules and Diagrams 9. A Worked Example for Data Flow Model Diagrams – Part 1 10. A Worked Example for Data Flow Model Diagrams – Part 2 11. A Worked Example for Data Flow Model Diagrams – Part 3 12. Integrating Validated Diagrams with SharePoint 2013 and Office365 Index

Going beyond the object model

Some programmers think that Visio is present just to provide a graphical canvas with the symbols and lines that they need to manipulate or interrogate. Perhaps they have been used to draw items in Windows Forms applications or even XAML-based development with WPF (Windows Presentation Foundation), Silverlight, or Windows 8 applications. To think like this is to misunderstand Visio, because it has a rich-diagramming engine, coupled with the ability to encapsulate data and custom behaviors in every element, not to mention the inheritance between certain types of objects. This has resulted in a fairly complex structure in parts of the object model, so that all of the desired functionality can be described fully.

Programmers who look at the Visio object model for the first time may be full of preconceptions and look in vain for the X and Y coordinate of a shape on a page. They are surprised and a little frustrated that the X coordinate of a shape on a page is:

shape...
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