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title | author | description | monikerRange | ms.author | ms.custom | ms.date | no-loc | uid | |
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ASP.NET Core Blazor layouts | guardrex | Learn how to create reusable layout components for Blazor apps. | >= aspnetcore-3.0 | riande | mvc | 09/23/2019 |
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blazor/layouts |
ASP.NET Core Blazor layouts
By Rainer Stropek and Luke Latham
Some app elements, such as menus, copyright messages, and company logos, are usually part of app's overall layout and used by every component in the app. Copying the code of these elements into all of the components of an app isn't an efficient approach—every time one of the elements requires an update, every component must be updated. Such duplication is difficult to maintain and can lead to inconsistent content over time. Layouts solve this problem.
Technically, a layout is just another component. A layout is defined in a Razor template or in C# code and can use data binding, dependency injection, and other component scenarios.
To turn a component into a layout, the component:
- Inherits from
LayoutComponentBase
, which defines aBody
property for the rendered content inside the layout. - Uses the Razor syntax
@Body
to specify the location in the layout markup where the content is rendered.
The following code sample shows the Razor template of a layout component, MainLayout.razor. The layout inherits LayoutComponentBase
and sets the @Body
between the navigation bar and the footer:
In an app based on one of the Blazor app templates, the MainLayout
component (MainLayout.razor) is in the app's Shared folder.
Default layout
Specify the default app layout in the Router
component in the app's App.razor file. The following Router
component, which is provided by the default Blazor templates, sets the default layout to the MainLayout
component:
To supply a default layout for NotFound
content, specify a LayoutView
for NotFound
content:
For more information on the Router
component, see xref:blazor/routing.
Specifying the layout as a default layout in the router is a useful practice because it can be overridden on a per-component or per-folder basis. Prefer using the router to set the app's default layout because it's the most general technique.
Specify a layout in a component
Use the Razor directive @layout
to apply a layout to a component. The compiler converts @layout
into a LayoutAttribute
, which is applied to the component class.
The content of the following MasterList
component is inserted into the MasterLayout
at the position of @Body
:
Specifying the layout directly in a component overrides a default layout set in the router or an @layout
directive imported from _Imports.razor.
Centralized layout selection
Every folder of an app can optionally contain a template file named _Imports.razor. The compiler includes the directives specified in the imports file in all of the Razor templates in the same folder and recursively in all of its subfolders. Therefore, an _Imports.razor file containing @layout MyCoolLayout
ensures that all of the components in a folder use MyCoolLayout
. There's no need to repeatedly add @layout MyCoolLayout
to all of the .razor files within the folder and subfolders. @using
directives are also applied to components in the same way.
The following _Imports.razor file imports:
MyCoolLayout
.- All Razor components in the same folder and any subfolders.
- The
BlazorApp1.Data
namespace.
The _Imports.razor file is similar to the _ViewImports.cshtml file for Razor views and pages but applied specifically to Razor component files.
Specifying a layout in _Imports.razor overrides a layout specified as the router's default layout.
Nested layouts
Apps can consist of nested layouts. A component can reference a layout which in turn references another layout. For example, nesting layouts are used to create a multi-level menu structure.
The following example shows how to use nested layouts. The EpisodesComponent.razor file is the component to display. The component references the MasterListLayout
:
The MasterListLayout.razor file provides the MasterListLayout
. The layout references another layout, MasterLayout
, where it's rendered. EpisodesComponent
is rendered where @Body
appears:
Finally, MasterLayout
in MasterLayout.razor contains the top-level layout elements, such as the header, main menu, and footer. MasterListLayout
with the EpisodesComponent
is rendered where @Body
appears: