Book Image

Web Development with Blazor

By : Jimmy Engström
Book Image

Web Development with Blazor

By: Jimmy Engström

Overview of this book

Blazor is an essential tool if you want to build interactive web apps without JS, but it comes with its own learning curve. Web Development with Blazor will help you overcome most common challenges developers face when getting started with Blazor and teach you the best coding practices. You’ll start by learning how to leverage the power of Blazor and explore the full capabilities of both Blazor Server and Blazor WebAssembly. Then you’ll move on to the practical part, which is centred around a sample project – a blog engine. This is where you’ll apply all your newfound knowledge about creating Blazor Server and Blazor WebAssembly projects, the inner working of Razor syntax, and validating forms, as well as creating your own components. You’ll learn all the key concepts involved in web development with Blazor, which you’ll also be able to put into practice straight away. By showing you how all the components work together practically, this book will help you avoid some of the common roadblocks that novice Blazor developers face and inspire you to start experimenting with Blazor on your other projects. When you reach the end of this Blazor book, you'll have gained the confidence you need to create and deploy production-ready Blazor applications.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
1
Section 1:The Basics
4
Section 2:Building an Application with Blazor
14
Section 3:Debug, Test, and Deploy

Chapter 10: JavaScript Interop

In this chapter, we will take a look at JavaScript. In certain scenarios, we still need to use JavaScript or we want to use an existing library that relies on JavaScript. Blazor uses JavaScript to update the Document Object Model (DOM), download files, and access things such as local storage on the client.

So, there are, and always will be, cases when we need to communicate with JavaScript, or have JavaScript communicate with us. Don’t worry. The Blazor community is an amazing one, so chances are someone has already built the interop that we need.

In this chapter, we will cover the following topics:

  • Why do we need JavaScript?
  • .NET to JavaScript
  • JavaScript to .NET
  • Implementing an existing JavaScript library