Book Image

Blazor WebAssembly by Example, 2e - Second Edition

By : Toi B. Wright
5 (1)
Book Image

Blazor WebAssembly by Example, 2e - Second Edition

5 (1)
By: Toi B. Wright

Overview of this book

Blazor WebAssembly helps developers build web applications without the need for JavaScript, plugins, or add-ons. With its continued growth in popularity, getting started with Blazor now can open doors to new career paths and exciting projects – and Blazor WebAssembly by Example will make your first steps easier. This is a project-based guide that will teach you how to build single-page web applications with Blazor, focusing heavily on the practical over the theoretical by providing detailed step-by-step instructions for each project. The author also includes a video for each project showing her following the step-by-step instructions, so readers can use them if they're unsure about any particular step. In this updated edition, you'll start by building simple standalone web applications and gradually progress to developing more advanced hosted web applications with SQL Server backends. Each project will cover a different aspect of the Blazor WebAssembly ecosystem, such as Razor components, JavaScript interop, security, event handling, debugging on the client, application state, and dependency injection. The book’s projects get more challenging as you progress, but you don’t have to complete them in order, which makes this book a valuable resource for beginners as well as those who just want to dip into specific topics. By the end of this book, you will have experience and lots of know-how on how to build a wide variety of single-page web applications with .NET, Blazor WebAssembly, and C#.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
13
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14
Index

Razor components

Blazor WebAssembly is a component-driven framework. Razor components are the fundamental building blocks of a Blazor WebAssembly application. They are classes that are implemented using a combination of C#, HTML, and Razor syntax. When the web app loads, the classes get downloaded into the browser as normal .NET assemblies (DLLs).

IMPORTANT NOTE

In this book, the terms Razor component and component are used interchangeably.

Using components

HTML element syntax is used to add one component to another component. The markup looks like an HTML tag where the name of the tag is the component type.

The following markup in the Pages/Index.razor file of the Demo project, which we will create later in this chapter, will render a SurveyPrompt instance:

<SurveyPrompt Title="How is Blazor working for you?" />

The preceding SurveyPrompt element includes an attribute parameter named Title.

Parameters

Component parameters...