Dad, self-employed, problem solver at heart, async all the way. Formerly a principal software engineer at Nuance Communications. Occasionally I tweet, blog and answer my own StackOverflow questions.
Glad you liked the article. Perhaps, the less drastic way to modernize a legacy WPF app would be to start converting it incrementally, view-by-view, to WinUI, using WinUI XAML islands. However, if you're really looking for something that would live on, and want to stay in .NET ecosystem, you may want to evaluate Blazor/Desktop. Historically, ASP.NET dev space has had a lot less friction than .NET UI dev space.
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Glad you liked the article. Perhaps, the less drastic way to modernize a legacy WPF app would be to start converting it incrementally, view-by-view, to WinUI, using WinUI XAML islands. However, if you're really looking for something that would live on, and want to stay in .NET ecosystem, you may want to evaluate Blazor/Desktop. Historically, ASP.NET dev space has had a lot less friction than .NET UI dev space.