I know of a tool that is fairly new but looks promising. It is invasive, unlike SilverlightSpy: you must add references and an attached property to make it work. It's really just a few references and you attach at the root, and you're good to go - easy to swap in/out.
It shows a lot of promise for being able to visualize the graph and even exposes the data context properties. There is a trial available. This is about the only tool I know that offers similar functionality.
First Floor Software is excited to announce the immediateavailability of Silverlight Spy 4. This release includes various fixesand improvements. The new licensing. First Floor Software is excited to announce the immediateavailability of Silverlight Spy 4. This release includes various fixesand improvements. The new licensing.
I only know of it because I met the owner of the company at a local user's group. I've used it in a few projects and it shows a lot of promise.
The success of, as seen in the recent, shows the capabilities of the technology and is attracting more developers. The addition of end-users and developers using Silverlight will also drive more tool development and one such useful tool is. Silverlight Spy is a free.NET 3.5 tool which allows for detailed inspection of web pages hosting Silverlight 2 content.
This tool uses its own built-in browser which allows users to navigate to any web site and inspect the Silverlight. I don't want to begin a flame war, but the 'success' of Microsoft Silverlight is quite relative. I can remember that event the ad web site for vista released recently was based on Adobe Flex.
Labview 7.1 crack. Since it was some kind of proof of the youthfulness of Silverlight, they released a new version based on Silverlight beta 2, and a HTML version with javascript effect library (and removed Flex version). But Silverlight is still in beta. I think Silverlight has the potential to become a great technology, but it's very young, and they change a lot of things at each new beta release (like Adobe did, when they began with Flex - versions 1.0, 1.5 and 2 very different). And Silverlight tools like this spy are very important in the adoption of the technology, particularly in the Open Source community.