Book Image

Blazor WebAssembly by Example

By : Toi B. Wright
Book Image

Blazor WebAssembly by Example

By: Toi B. Wright

Overview of this book

Blazor WebAssembly makes it possible to run C# code on the browser instead of having to use JavaScript, and does not rely on plugins or add-ons. The only technical requirement for using Blazor WebAssembly is a browser that supports WebAssembly, which, as of today, all modern browsers do. Blazor WebAssembly by Example is a project-based guide for learning how to build single-page web applications using the Blazor WebAssembly framework. This book emphasizes the practical over the theoretical by providing detailed step-by-step instructions for each project. You'll start by building simple standalone web applications and progress to developing more advanced hosted web applications with SQL Server backends. Each project covers a different aspect of the Blazor WebAssembly ecosystem, such as Razor components, JavaScript interop, event handling, application state, and dependency injection. The book is designed in such a way that you can complete the projects in any order. By the end of this book, you will have experience building a wide variety of single-page web applications with .NET, Blazor WebAssembly, and C#.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)

Summary

You should now be able to create a Blazor WebAssembly application.

In this chapter, we introduced Razor components, routing, and Razor syntax.

After that, we used the Blazor WebAssembly App project template provided by Microsoft to create the Demo Blazor WebAssembly project. We added a parameter to the Counter component and examined how routing works.

In the last part of the chapter, we created an empty Blazor WebAssembly project on which to base our own custom project template. We created a custom project template using the Export Template Wizard. After we finished configuring our custom project template, we used it to create an empty Blazor WebAssembly project.

We will use the Empty Blazor WebAssembly App project template to create the project in the next chapter of this book.