Title Change:
The course title has been changed to reflect the current version of Blazor with ASP.NET 6.0. This is justified by the addition of a section on migration to ASPNET 6.0 that runs through the process of migration in two easy steps without any change in the existing ASP.NET Core 3.1 code base.
Have you ever thought of being a front-end developer with Single Page Applications (SPA) in mind but hate using Javascript to achieve your objectives?
Have you ever thought of replacing React and/or Angular from your SPA by using a framework that uses your skills as a C# programmer?
If you have pondered on the above questions anytime in your career/curriculum, you have come to the right place. Yes, Blazor is a web framework offering from Micrsoft which allows you to leverage your C# language coding skills and allows you to achieve all that a more established React/Angular could offer without ever using JavaScript at all. At the same time get all that you could desire from a Single Page Application.
This is a basic course to start with and requires no prior knowledge of Blazor. As the course progresses the flow transfers to more advanced topics so by the end, students are expected to acquire an intermediate skill level.
As this course is completely built around Blazor, let's have a quick overview of what it is?
Blazor is an open-source web framework offering from Microsoft
It uses just C# and razor(HTML/CSS) markup to create rich interactive user interfaces
Blazor does not require JavaScript for its development
It has a complete client-side(browser) version using web assembly.
Now a bit about the course:
Section 1: Includes the features and highlights of the Blazor framework and the course. It guides through the necessary installation and configuration requirements and concludes with a demo of the finished application
Section 2: This section deals in the Migration of the Completed Blazor MovieApp from ASP.NET Core 3.1 to ASP.NET 6.0
Section 3: The section introduces learners to Blazor and its hosting models
Section 4: Blazor has a component-based ecosystem, hence this section dives straight into building the first component
Section 5: As the course uses the latest released version of ASP.NET Core 3.1 (at the time of writing), this section deals in the new features added since the last release (3.0)
Section 6: Dedicated to a coding exercise as the first assignment
Section 7: This section deals in advanced concepts with hands-on coding such as: Routing, Data Binding, Event Callback, Inheritance and Lifecycle methods
Section 8: It is a short section dedicated to learning asynchronous programming fundamentals, the cornerstone for Blazor
Section 9: This section is completely dedicated to building the CRUD movie application
Section 10: Introduces authentication and authorization to the movie app to allow users to view only their user profile data (not all data)
Section 11: Is a bonus section to show the usage of a third-party component (Spinkit with Spinloader) to show nice, animated loaders while the application is loading. This section ends with an end of the course assignment to build a component (based on a spec.)
Section 12: A section dedicated to Pagination of the Movie App
Section 13: Introduces Blazor as a Progressive Web Application
Section 14: Testing Blazor Component using bUnit
Section 15: New section added that shows the complete walk-through of Creation of a Blazor Server Application with Pagination that Consumes an Existing Customer Web API
Recent Reviews: "One of the best Blazor course" by Mohammed Cisse