Archive: our articles

Category: SPA

.NET

Understanding and Controlling the Blazor WebAssembly Startup Process

There are a lot of things going on in the background, when a Blazor WebAssembly application is being started. In some cases you might want to take a bit more control over that process. One example might be the wish to display a loading screen for applications that take some time for initial preparation, or when users are on a slow internet connection. However, in order to control something, we need to understand what is happening first. This article takes you down the rabbit hole of how a Blazor WASM application starts up.

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.NET

Adding Superpowers to your Blazor WebAssembly App with Project Fugu APIs

Blazor WebAssembly is a powerful framework for building web applications that run on the client-side. With Project Fugu APIs, you can extend the capabilities of these apps to access new device features and provide an enhanced user experience. In this article, learn about the benefits of using Project Fugu APIs, the wrapper packages that are available for Blazor WebAssembly, and how to use them in your application.



Whether you’re a seasoned Blazor developer or just getting started, this article will help you add superpowers to your Blazor WebAssembly app.

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.NET

Blazor WebAssembly in Practice: Maturity, Success Factors, Showstoppers

ASP.NET Core Blazor is Microsoft’s framework for implementing web-based applications, aimed at developers with knowledge of .NET and C#. It exists alongside other frameworks such as ASP.NET Core MVC. About two and a half years after the release of Blazor WebAssembly and based on our experiences from many customer projects at Thinktecture, we want to have a close look at the following questions: What is the current state of the framework? How can you successfully use Blazor? And where does it have limitations?

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Three different textured walls
.NET

Dependency Injection Scopes in Blazor

The dependency injection system is a big part of how modern ASP.NET Core works internally: It provides a flexible solution for developers to structure their projects, decouple their dependencies, and control the lifetimes of the components within an application. In Blazor – a new part of ASP.NET Core – however, the DI system feels a bit odd, and things seem to work a bit differently than expected. This article will explain why this is not only a feeling but indeed the case in the first place and how to handle the differences in order to not run into problems later on.

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Angular

Additional Approaches: Advanced Progressive Web Apps – Push Notifications Under Control – Part 4

In the previous parts of this article series, we learned that Apple does not support the standardized web-based push mechanisms, and there is no sign of a possible timeline for implementation. Therefore we have to look at additional ways to bring the users’ attention back to our application. Let’s use the final article of the series to have a quick look at some approaches that will let us send some form of push message without using the Push API.

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Angular

Re-Using Angular components in a Blazor WebAssembly application using Angular Elements – Web Components custom elements, FTW!

Microsoft’s Blazor WebAssembly toolkit is one of the new kids on the block in WebAssembly land. For many developers WebAssembly (or WASM) is the origin for a new revolution in the web. We can finally(?) use other languages and frameworks than JavaScript to run applications in a standards-based way in a cross-platform fashion on all browsers, on any devices (please refer to the current support of WebAssembly in your browser).

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