Book Image

.NET MAUI for C# Developers

By : Jesse Liberty, Rodrigo Juarez
3.7 (6)
Book Image

.NET MAUI for C# Developers

3.7 (6)
By: Jesse Liberty, Rodrigo Juarez

Overview of this book

While UI plays a pivotal role in retaining users in a highly competitive landscape, maintaining the same UI can be tricky if you use different languages for different platforms, leading to mismatches and un-synced pages. In this book, you'll see how .NET MAUI allows you to create a real-world application that will run natively on different platforms. By building on your C# experience, you’ll further learn to create beautiful and engaging UI using XAML, architect a solid app, and discover best practices for this Microsoft platform. The book starts with the fundamentals and quickly moves on to intermediate and advanced topics on laying out your pages, navigating between them, and adding controls to gather and display data. You’ll explore the key architectural pattern of Model-View-ViewModel: and ways to leverage it. You’ll also use xUnit and NSubstitute to create robust and reliable code. By the end of this book, you’ll be well-equipped to leverage .NET MAUI and create an API for your app to interact with a web frontend to the backend data using C#.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
1
Part 1 – Getting Started
8
Part 2 – Intermediate Topics
12
Part 3 – Advanced Topics

Sending and receiving messages

Rather than reaching into View, we can have ViewModel signal View when it is time to display the dialog or other View-dependent element.

For example, suppose we want to show Snackbar when the user clicks on the Create button. Rather than using an event handler, we can use Command (which is preferred because it puts the logic into ViewModel). ViewModel might then massage data or otherwise do whatever it needs to do, and then signal View to display Snackbar by sending out a message to that effect.

The idea is that ViewModel publishes a message such as “anyone who has subscribed to this message, show a Snackbar” and the page subscribes to that message and so shows Snackbar when the message is received.

In some circumstances, there may be more than one Subscriber. For that matter, in some circumstances, more than one Publisher can send the same message, as shown in Figure 5.3:

Figure 5.3 – Publish and Subscribe...