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screen when clicked. And you can do it without programming. You may or may not want to get so
fancy. But the capability exists in this program to create user interfaces using a wide range of media
in a wide range of combinations and to do so with greater ease than has ever been possible before.
Chapter 3 includes instructions for playing movies on animated 3D screens and creating
triggers to resize each of them to fill the window when the user clicks.
FIGURE 1.1
These buttons, consisting of video on animated 3D planes, are examples of Blend’s capacity for merging
video, animation, 3D, and interactivity.
Designing your application with vector graphics
Microsoft Expression Blend provides you with a wide range of tools that you can use to build your
own vector graphics or to import vector graphics already built in Microsoft Expression Design or
other applications. Figure 1.2 displays just a few vector graphic objects that you can create from
scratch in Blend.
See Part II for detailed information on how to create and manipulate vector graphics
within Blend.
Vector graphics allow you to zoom in on objects without any apparent loss in detail. In user inter-
faces, this is a distinct advantage for vector graphic images compared to bitmap images, which can
become fuzzy and start showing individual pixels when scaled too large. Because monitors are
increasing in size and resolution, it’s becoming increasingly important to use vector graphics as
much as possible to avoid those chunky pixels.
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Exploring New User Interface Techniques
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