Let’s start with something relatively easy… navigating between pages in Windows 8.
Create a new application in Visual Studio 11. Add two BlankPages to the application, naming the first Page1.xaml and the second (you guessed it) Page2.xaml.
Find the Page name in each file and change them accordingly. For example, on page 1, your code should look like this:
<TextBlock x:Name="pageTitle" Grid.Column="1" Text="Page 1" Style="{StaticResource PageHeaderTextStyle}"/>
We need the ability to navigate from Page 1 to Page 2. For that, we’ll add a HyperLinkButton. For purposes of formatting, we’ll put that control into a StackPanel:
<StackPanel Grid.Row="1" Margin="120,0,120,60"> <HyperlinkButton Content="Click to go to page 2" Click="HyperlinkButton_Click_1"/> </StackPanel>
Go to page 2, where you’ve already fixed the name of the page, and add a TextBlock (again, within a StackPanel)
<StackPanel Grid.Row=”1″
Margin=”120,0,120,60″>
<TextBlock HorizontalAlignment=”Left” Name=”Message” Text=”Hello World!”/>
</StackPanel>
Open Page1.xaml.cs and find the event handler for the HyperLinkButton. Add the following line of code,
this.Frame.Navigate( typeof( Page2 ) );
Finally, open App.xaml.cs and set Page 1 as the start page. To do so, locate OnLaunched() and substitute Page1 for BlankPage,
rootFrame.Navigate(typeof(Page1));
Run the application; Page 1 opens and offers you a link to Page 2. Page 2 displays your Hello World message. Notice that Page 2 has a back button; that is actually on every page, but Page 1 collapses the back button because CanGoBack is false (there is no page to go back to).
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