Thank you for your input.
>Winforms is for the most part a stable technology. WPF is evolving. I've seen quotes from MS execs that even they don't think WPF is right for standard business apps today.
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>That could change at any moment, but I don't see a groundswell of people moving to WPF today. There are certainly some. And you'd be getting in on the groundfloor if you new it well.
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>>A friend of mine, who is supposedly an expert on .NET technologies, said that for developing a Windows-type application in .NET I should not even consider WinForms but only learn and user WPF? His reasoning was that WinForm is an old technology that will go away and will be replaced by WPF.
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>>Does it make sense?
"The creative process is nothing but a series of crises." Isaac Bashevis Singer
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