Unfortunately, I can only give you half an answer - the general principles on why this happens and how to avoid it. As to the implementation in SL, I can only give you some general ideas as I'm not an expert there.
Those bands result from the limited color depth of the display. To reduce the effect, the gradient has to be made slightly noisy. The simplest way to do is to calculate the color from the gradient as a floating number, and then round it to an integer in a weighted, random manner - like this:
correct_value = linear_gradient(x,y) // e.g 25.3
whole_part = round_down(correct_value) // 25
frac_part = correct_value - whole_part // 0.3
color_used = whole_part
if (true_with_probability(frac_part)):
color_used = color_used + 1 // color_used == 25 with 70% chance
// 26 with 30% chance
Here is an example of using this technique (on the left is the effect of simply rounding to the nearest integer, right is rounding with noise):
As to how to implement that in your case - I assume there would be some way to create a custom Brush
object that would allow you to do the calculations per pixel, or alternatively some sort of shader functionality which could help. If those are not possible, you can also simply generate a bitmap using this logic, and use that bitmap as the brush (I believe this would be ImageBrush
, but that's just from googling).
Perhaps somebody with more Silverlight knowledge can chime in and provide the best implementation in this case.