Video: Moving Across State Lines with Workflow 4.5

- select the contributor at the end of the page -
Windows Workflow 4.5 includes many new features, not the least of which is State Machine workflows.  In this video excerpt from Matt Milner's new course What's New in Windows Workflow 4.5 you'll see how to create a State Machine workflow and how it transitions between states using Conditions and Actions.  In the full course Matt covers other key new features like simplified authoring, contract first workflow services in WCF, and workflow versioning.


[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SByGXWVQ92o?feature=player_detailpage]




Matt is an independent consultant specializing in Microsoft .NET application design and development. As a writer Matt has contributed to several journals and magazines including MSDN Magazine where he currently authors the workflow content for the Foundations column. Matt regularly shares his love of technology by speaking at local, regional and international conferences such as Tech Ed. Microsoft has recognized Matt as an MVP for his community contributions around connected systems technology.

You can watch the full HD version of this video along with the other 2 hr 37 min of video found in this professional course by subscribing to Pluralsight. Visit What's New in Windows Workflow 4.5 to view the full course outline. Pluralsight subscribers also benefit from cool features like mobile appsfull library searchprogress trackingexercise files,assessments, and offline viewing. Happy learning!

Get our content first. In your inbox.

Loading form...

If this message remains, it may be due to cookies being disabled or to an ad blocker.

Contributor

Paul Ballard

Paul Ballard is a Chief Architect specializing in large scale distributed system development and enterprise software processes. Paul has more than twenty years of development experience including being a former Microsoft MVP, a speaker at technical conferences such as Microsoft Tech-Ed and VSLive, and a published author. Prior to working on the Windows platform, he built software using a vast array of technologies including Java, Unix, C, and even OS/2.