I'm wondering about that many new applications, I think most built in WPF, has this really cool Windows Aero Glass interfaces.
For example Seesmic or the upcoming Firefox 3.7
(source: crenk.com)
Searching in the internet most time it looks like you need a hack to realize this. But seriously: I don't think big software development teams use hacks to roll out their huge used products.
So my question is: Windows Aero Glass Areas - How to do?
Is it only possible with a hack?
Maybe it's just one property, i don't know. I'm WinForms developer so I never tested out WPF. But my Google search didn't look like It is easier with WPF.
To have Aero glass, you need to use the Desktop Window Manager. It is a Win32 DLL, so you need to P/Invoke it. Articles on how to do this are all over the Internet, ex. http://blogs.msdn.com/b/adam_nathan/archive/2006/05/04/589686.aspx Using P/Invoke is definitely not a hack.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2658518/windows-aero-areas-in-own-c-sharp-applications