Blazor continues to make waves in the .NET ecosystem by offering a powerful and flexible UI framework that allows developers to build rich, interactive web applications using C# instead of JavaScript.
WebAssembly, the open source tech that makes client-side Blazor work, was the star of the ASP.NET Core show in the new .NET 7 Release Candidate 1. Sometimes abbreviated as Wasm, it provides a portable ...
Blazor Server and Blazor WebAssembly are variants of Blazor that create a single-page app (SPA). Although these two siblings hardly differ from a development perspective (developers write Razor ...
Blazor WebAssembly is the principal hosting model for Blazor applications. Choosing this option means your application runs entirely inside the client's browser, making it a direct alternative to ...
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It’s not hard to see why Microsoft is investing in WebAssembly. It’s a technology that scratches many different itches. It delivers apps to users, adds rich user interfaces to web applications, and ...
Among the .NET news out of Microsoft Build 2020 is a new preview of C#, Microsoft's programming language from the .NET team, plus a fully supported release of Blazor WebAssembly. According to ...
It’s a year or so since Microsoft unveiled Blazor, its tool for running .Net code in the browser. It’s been an eventful year with several releases, each adding more and more code compatibility. Now ...