Total 44,593 skills, Frontend Development has 4529 skills
Showing 12 of 4529 skills
Guide for implementing Syncfusion TileLayout control in Windows Forms applications. Use when creating Windows 8 Metro-style tile interfaces, grouped tile containers, live tiles with rotating images/text using ImageStreamer, drag-and-drop reordering, or dashboard-style layouts with customizable positioning and appearance.
Guide for implementing Syncfusion Windows Forms Chart control with 35+ chart types, data binding, series configuration, axes customization, and interactive features. Use this when working with Windows Forms charts, ChartControl, chart types, or data visualization in WinForms. This skill covers chart series, chart axes, data binding, legends, styling, and all chart types including Area, Bar, Line, Pie, Column, Bubble, Candle, financial charts, and statistical charts for Windows Forms applications (.NET Framework).
Guide for implementing Syncfusion GroupBar (Navigation Pane) control in Windows Forms applications. Use when creating Outlook-style navigation, hierarchical sidebar navigation, collapsible group containers, or toolbox-style interfaces. Covers stacked navigation panes, Office 2007/2010/2016 themed navigation, nested GroupBar containers, and categorized control collections for structured navigation layouts.
Guide for implementing Syncfusion GradientPanel control in Windows Forms applications. Use when creating gradient backgrounds, container panels with visual styling, or grouped controls with custom backgrounds. Covers gradient containers, styled panel groups, background customization with pattern/solid/gradient displays, visual containers, and panel-based layouts.
Implement and configure Syncfusion RadialSlider control in Windows Forms - a circular slider for visual numeric value selection with rotating needle. Use when creating circular value selection controls, rotary inputs, dial-based controls, or radial numeric input. Covers circular value selection, rotating needle control, dial-based input, visual value picker with divisions, and radial numeric input controls.
Guide for implementing Syncfusion EditControl (SyntaxEditor) in Windows Forms applications. Use when creating interactive code editors with syntax highlighting, IntelliSense, multi-language support, or Visual Studio-like editing capabilities. Covers installation, syntax highlighting for 12+ built-in languages (C#, VB.NET, XML, HTML, Java, SQL, PowerShell, JavaScript), custom language configuration, code outlining, auto-completion, find/replace dialogs, file operations, export (XML/RTF/HTML), split views, and comprehensive event handling for building professional code editor applications.
Implements Syncfusion MetroForm control for creating modern Metro-styled Windows Forms with customizable caption bars, borders, and colors. Use this when working with MetroForm, custom title bars, flat UI forms, or modernizing Windows Forms appearance. The skill provides guidance for caption bar customization, rounded corners, caption labels and images, and advanced styling features.
Comprehensive guide for implementing Syncfusion MainFrameBarManager menu and toolbar system in Windows Forms. Use when creating menus, toolbars, command bars, or menu structures. Covers hierarchical menu models, BarItem types, interactive features, keyboard support, MDI integration, and state persistence for building professional menu-driven applications with shortcuts, mnemonics, tooltips, and customizable toolbars.
Implement and configure Syncfusion Windows Forms EditableList controls for inline list editing. Use this when working with editable list boxes, list controls with add/edit/delete capabilities, or AutoComplete integration. Covers setup, data binding, appearance customization, and styling.
Expert in Svelte and SvelteKit development with modern patterns and SSR
Best practices and guidelines for Turbopack, the Rust-powered incremental bundler for Next.js and modern web development
A design engineering skill that helps developers add crafted micro-interactions, polish, and thoughtful details to their interfaces — the invisible decisions that separate software people love from software people tolerate.