Book Image

.NET MAUI Cross-Platform Application Development - Second Edition

By : Roger Ye
3 (1)
Book Image

.NET MAUI Cross-Platform Application Development - Second Edition

3 (1)
By: Roger Ye

Overview of this book

An evolution of Xamarin.Forms, .NET MAUI is a cross-platform framework for creating native mobile and desktop apps with C# and XAML. Using .NET MAUI, you can develop apps that’ll run on Android, iOS, macOS, and Windows from a single shared codebase. In this revised edition of .NET MAUI Cross-Platform Application Development you will be introduced to .NET 8 and get up to speed with app development in no time. The book begins by showing you how to develop a cross-platform application using .NET MAUI, including guidance for migrating from Xamarin.Forms. You’ll gain all the knowledge needed to create a cross-platform application for Android, iOS, macOS, and Windows following an example project step by step. As you advance, you’ll integrate the latest frontend technology into your app using Blazor components, including the new Blazor Bindings feature. After this, you’ll learn how to test and deploy your apps. With new coverage on creating mock .NET MAUI components, you can develop unit tests for your application. You will additionally learn how to perform Razor component testing using bUnit. By the end of this book, you’ll have learned how to develop your own cross-platform applications using .NET MAUI.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Part 1: Exploring .NET MAUI
9
Part 2: Implementing .NET MAUI Blazor
13
Part 3: Testing and Deployment
16
Other Books You May Enjoy
17
Index

Moving to .NET MAUI

With the .NET unification, Xamarin has become a part of the .NET platform, and Xamarin.Forms is integrating with .NET in the form of .NET MAUI.

.NET MAUI is a first-class .NET citizen with the namespace Microsoft.Maui.

Making the move to .NET MAUI is also an opportunity for Microsoft to redesign and rebuild Xamarin.Forms from the ground up and tackle some of the issues that have been lingering at a lower level. Compared to Xamarin.Forms, .NET MAUI uses a single project structure, supports hot reloads better and supports the MVU and Blazor development patterns.

It’s important to note that MVU is not currently available as a stable method for building apps with .NET MAUI; it has only been announced.

Figure 1.2 shows an architecture diagram of .NET MAUI; you can find it in the Microsoft documentation. From Figure 1.2, we can see that there is a common BCL for all supported operating systems. Under the BCL, there are two runtimes...