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title | author | description | monikerRange | ms.author | ms.custom | ms.date | uid |
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Build your first Blazor app | guardrex | Build a Blazor app step-by-step. | >= aspnetcore-3.0 | riande | mvc | 08/23/2019 | tutorials/first-blazor-app |
Build your first Blazor app
By Daniel Roth and Luke Latham
This tutorial shows you how to build and modify a Blazor app.
Follow the guidance in the xref:blazor/get-started article to create a Blazor project for this tutorial. Name the project ToDoList.
Build components
-
Browse to each of the app's three pages in the Pages folder: Home, Counter, and Fetch data. These pages are implemented by the Razor component files Index.razor, Counter.razor, and FetchData.razor.
-
On the Counter page, select the Click me button to increment the counter without a page refresh. Incrementing a counter in a webpage normally requires writing JavaScript, but Blazor provides a better approach using C#.
-
Examine the implementation of the
Counter
component in the Counter.razor file.Pages/Counter.razor:
The UI of the
Counter
component is defined using HTML. Dynamic rendering logic (for example, loops, conditionals, expressions) is added using an embedded C# syntax called Razor. The HTML markup and C# rendering logic are converted into a component class at build time. The name of the generated .NET class matches the file name.Members of the component class are defined in an
@code
block. In the@code
block, component state (properties, fields) and methods are specified for event handling or for defining other component logic. These members are then used as part of the component's rendering logic and for handling events.When the Click me button is selected:
- The
Counter
component's registeredonclick
handler is called (theIncrementCount
method). - The
Counter
component regenerates its render tree. - The new render tree is compared to the previous one.
- Only modifications to the Document Object Model (DOM) are applied. The displayed count is updated.
- The
-
Modify the C# logic of the
Counter
component to make the count increment by two instead of one. -
Rebuild and run the app to see the changes. Select the Click me button. The counter increments by two.
Use components
Include a component in another component using an HTML syntax.
-
Add the
Counter
component to the app'sIndex
component by adding a<Counter />
element to theIndex
component (Index.razor).If you're using Blazor client-side for this experience, a
SurveyPrompt
component is used by theIndex
component. Replace the<SurveyPrompt>
element with a<Counter />
element. If you're using a Blazor server-side app for this experience, add the<Counter />
element to theIndex
component:Pages/Index.razor:
-
Rebuild and run the app. The
Index
component has its own counter.
Component parameters
Components can also have parameters. Component parameters are defined using public properties on the component class decorated with [Parameter]
. Use attributes to specify arguments for a component in markup.
-
Update the component's
@code
C# code:- Add a
IncrementAmount
property decorated with the[Parameter]
attribute. - Change the
IncrementCount
method to use theIncrementAmount
when increasing the value ofcurrentCount
.
Pages/Counter.razor:
- Add a
-
Specify an
IncrementAmount
parameter in theIndex
component's<Counter>
element using an attribute. Set the value to increment the counter by ten.Pages/Index.razor:
-
Reload the
Index
component. The counter increments by ten each time the Click me button is selected. The counter in theCounter
component continues to increment by one.
Route to components
The @page
directive at the top of the Counter.razor file specifies that the Counter
component is a routing endpoint. The Counter
component handles requests sent to /counter
. Without the @page
directive, a component doesn't handle routed requests, but the component can still be used by other components.
Dependency injection
Services registered in the app's service container are available to components via dependency injection (DI). Inject services into a component using the @inject
directive.
Examine the directives of the FetchData
component.
If working with a Blazor server-side app, the WeatherForecastService
service is registered as a singleton, so one instance of the service is available throughout the app. The @inject
directive is used to inject the instance of the WeatherForecastService
service into the component.
Pages/FetchData.razor:
The FetchData
component uses the injected service, as ForecastService
, to retrieve an array of WeatherForecast
objects:
If working with a Blazor client-side app, HttpClient
is injected to obtain weather forecast data from the weather.json file in the wwwroot/sample-data folder:
Pages/FetchData.razor:
A @foreach loop is used to render each forecast instance as a row in the table of weather data:
Build a todo list
Add a new component to the app that implements a simple todo list.
-
Add an empty file named Todo.razor to the app in the Pages folder:
-
Provide the initial markup for the component:
@page "/todo" <h1>Todo</h1>
-
Add the
Todo
component to the navigation bar.The
NavMenu
component (Shared/NavMenu.razor) is used in the app's layout. Layouts are components that allow you to avoid duplication of content in the app.Add a
<NavLink>
element for theTodo
component by adding the following list item markup below the existing list items in the Shared/NavMenu.razor file:<li class="nav-item px-3"> <NavLink class="nav-link" href="todo"> <span class="oi oi-list-rich" aria-hidden="true"></span> Todo </NavLink> </li>
-
Rebuild and run the app. Visit the new Todo page to confirm that the link to the
Todo
component works. -
Add a TodoItem.cs file to the root of the project to hold a class that represents a todo item. Use the following C# code for the
TodoItem
class: -
Return to the
Todo
component (Pages/Todo.razor):- Add a field for the todo items in an
@code
block. TheTodo
component uses this field to maintain the state of the todo list. - Add unordered list markup and a
foreach
loop to render each todo item as a list item (<li>
).
- Add a field for the todo items in an
-
The app requires UI elements for adding todo items to the list. Add a text input (
<input>
) and a button (<button>
) below the unordered list (<ul>...</ul>
): -
Rebuild and run the app. When the Add todo button is selected, nothing happens because an event handler isn't wired up to the button.
-
Add an
AddTodo
method to theTodo
component and register it for button selections using the@onclick
attribute. TheAddTodo
C# method is called when the button is selected: -
To get the title of the new todo item, add a
newTodo
string field at the top of the@code
block and bind it to the value of the text input using thebind
attribute in the<input>
element:<input placeholder="Something todo" @bind="newTodo" />
-
Update the
AddTodo
method to add theTodoItem
with the specified title to the list. Clear the value of the text input by settingnewTodo
to an empty string: -
Rebuild and run the app. Add some todo items to the todo list to test the new code.
-
The title text for each todo item can be made editable, and a check box can help the user keep track of completed items. Add a check box input for each todo item and bind its value to the
IsDone
property. Change@todo.Title
to an<input>
element bound to@todo.Title
: -
To verify that these values are bound, update the
<h1>
header to show a count of the number of todo items that aren't complete (IsDone
isfalse
).<h1>Todo (@todos.Count(todo => !todo.IsDone))</h1>
-
The completed
Todo
component (Pages/Todo.razor): -
Rebuild and run the app. Add todo items to test the new code.
[!div class="nextstepaction"] xref:blazor/components