6 Integrations with Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF)

View a list of Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) integrations and software that integrates with Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) below. Compare the best Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) integrations as well as features, ratings, user reviews, and pricing of software that integrates with Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF). Here are the current Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) integrations in 2026:

  • 1
    Visual Studio

    Visual Studio

    Microsoft

    Microsoft Visual Studio is the industry-leading integrated development environment (IDE) for building modern applications across desktop, mobile, cloud, and web. It empowers developers to write, refactor, debug, test, and deploy software faster with intelligent assistance powered by GitHub Copilot and AI-driven workflows. With Agent Mode, developers can automate repetitive coding tasks, optimize performance, and receive contextual help directly in the IDE. The suite includes Visual Studio 2022, the comprehensive IDE for .NET and C++ development on Windows, and Visual Studio Code, the lightweight, cross-platform editor supporting JavaScript, Python, and dozens of other languages. Visual Studio integrates seamlessly with Azure, GitHub, and CI/CD pipelines, enabling teams to collaborate and ship code efficiently. Trusted by millions worldwide, Visual Studio provides the tools and intelligence developers need to build reliable, scalable, and secure applications from concept to release.
    Starting Price: $45/user/month
  • 2
    XAML

    XAML

    Microsoft

    XAML is a declarative markup language. As applied to the .NET Core programming model, XAML simplifies creating a UI for a .NET Core app. You can create visible UI elements in the declarative XAML markup, and then separate the UI definition from the run-time logic by using code-behind files that are joined to the markup through partial class definitions. XAML directly represents the instantiation of objects in a specific set of backing types defined in assemblies. This is unlike most other markup languages, which are typically an interpreted language without such a direct tie to a backing type system. XAML enables a workflow where separate parties can work on the UI and the logic of an app, using potentially different tools. When represented as text, XAML files are XML files that generally have the .xaml extension. The files can be encoded by any XML encoding, but encoding as UTF-8 is typical.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 3
    SciChart

    SciChart

    SciChart

    SciChart is a cross-platform, high-performance charting and data visualization library suite that provides developers with GPU-accelerated, real-time 2D and 3D chart components for JavaScript, WPF/.NET, iOS, macOS, and Android applications so they can render millions to billions of data points smoothly with minimal lag and build complex interactive dashboards, scientific graphs, and live telemetry displays without performance penalties; its proprietary Visual Xccelerator engine and WebGL/WebAssembly support enable charts to update at high frame rates even under heavy data loads typical of big-data, financial trading, and instrumentation applications. SciChart offers a rich API with extensive customization (axes, annotations, interaction modifiers, themes, advanced chart types like heatmaps, polar plots, 3D surface meshes, vector fields, candlesticks, and more), seamless integration into modern development workflows.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 4
    .NET

    .NET

    Microsoft

    Free. Cross-platform. Open source. A developer platform for building all your apps. Build native apps for Android, iOS, macOS and Windows from a single codebase. You can write your .NET apps in C#, F#, or Visual Basic. Your skills, code, and favorite libraries apply anywhere you use .NET. You can learn more about what .NET can do with these free videos. .NET is open source and we are very thankful for the many contributions it receives from the community.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 5
    XML

    XML

    World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)

    Extensible Markup Language (XML) is a simple, very flexible text format derived from SGML (ISO 8879). Originally designed to meet the challenges of large-scale electronic publishing, XML is also playing an increasingly important role in the exchange of a wide variety of data on the Web and elsewhere. This page describes the work being done at W3C within the XML Activity, and how it is structured. Work at W3C takes place in Working Groups. The Working Groups within the XML Activity are listed below, together with links to their individual web pages. You can find and download formal technical specifications here, because we publish them. This is not a place to find tutorials, products, courses, books or other XML-related information. There are some links below that may help you find such resources. You will find links to W3C Recommendations, Proposed Recommendations, Working Drafts, conformance test suites and other documents on the pages for each Working Group.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 6
    E-ICEBLUE

    E-ICEBLUE

    E-ICEBLUE

    E-iceblue provides a comprehensive suite of professional development libraries and APIs designed to enable developers to create, read, write, edit, convert, print, manipulate and view a wide range of document formats programmatically across multiple programming environments without relying on external applications like Microsoft Office or Adobe Acrobat. Its product range includes Spire.Office and individual components for .NET platforms (such as Spire.Doc, Spire.XLS, Spire.Presentation, Spire.PDF, Spire.Barcode, Spire.Email and Spire.OCR) that handle Word, Excel, PowerPoint, PDF, barcode generation and email operations in C#, VB.NET, ASP.NET, .NET Core, Xamarin and WPF applications, plus viewer libraries for embedded document display. E-iceblue also offers equivalent APIs for Java, C++, Python and JavaScript, as well as mobile and cloud libraries (including Spire.Cloud.Office with HTML5 browser support for Word and Excel), supporting document processing tasks.
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