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  • Book Overview & Buying Web Development with Blazor
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Web Development with Blazor

Web Development with Blazor - Second Edition

By : Jimmy Engström
4.4 (18)
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Web Development with Blazor

Web Development with Blazor

4.4 (18)
By: Jimmy Engström

Overview of this book

Blazor is an essential tool if you want to build interactive web apps without JavaScript, but it has a learning curve. Updated with the latest code in .NET 7 and C# 11 and written by someone who adopted Blazor early, this book will help you overcome the challenges associated with being a beginner with Blazor and teach you the best coding practices. You’ll start by learning how to leverage the power of Blazor and exploring the full capabilities of both Blazor Server and Blazor WebAssembly. Then you'll move on to the practical part, centered around a sample project – a blog engine. You'll apply all your newfound knowledge about creating Blazor projects, the inner workings of Razor syntax, validating forms, and creating your own components. This new edition also looks at source generators, dives deeper into Blazor WebAssembly with ahead-of-time, and includes a dedicated new chapter demonstrating how to move components of an existing JavaScript (Angular, React) or MVC-based website to Blazor or combine the two. You’ll also see how to use Blazor (Hybrid) together with .NET MAUI to create cross-platform desktop and mobile applications. When you reach the end of this book, you'll have the confidence you need to create and deploy production-ready Blazor applications, and you'll have a big-picture view of the Blazor landscape.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
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20
Other Books You May Enjoy
21
Index

Creating the service

There are many ways to create a service, such as via REST or perhaps gRPC. In this book, we will cover REST.

For those who haven't worked with REST before, REST stands for REpresentational State Transfer. Simply put, it is a way for machines to talk to other machines using HTTP.

With REST, we use different HTTP verbs for different operations. It could look something like this:

This is what we are going to implement for tags, categories, and blog posts.

Since the API takes care of whether the post should be created, we'll cheat a little bit and only implement Put (replace) because we don't know whether we are creating or updating the data.

The API will only be used by Blazor WebAssembly, so we will implement the API in the BlazorWebAssembly.Server project.

Adding data access

In order for out API do be able to get data from our repository we need to add the BlogApiJsonDirectAccessSetting class to the dependency injection.
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Web Development with Blazor
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