دوره آموزشی چهار ساعته Blazor Hybrid
Learn Blazor Hybrid - Full Course for Beginners | Build cross-platform apps in C#
Let's start our journey together to build beautiful native cross-platform apps for iOS, Android, macOS, and Windows with Blazor Hybrid, .NET MAUI, C#, and Visual Studio! In this full workshop, I will walk you through everything you need to know about .NET MAUI and building your very first app. You will learn the basics including how to build user interfaces with Razor, how to show data from the internet, how to navigate between pages and combine .NET MAUI pages with Razor pages, access platform features like geolocation, and theme your app for light theme and dark theme. This course has everything you need to learn the basics and set you up for success when building apps with Blazor Hybrid!
Chapters:
00:00:00 - Intro to the Blazor Hybrid Workshop
00:04:28 - What is Blazor Hybrid & How to Install
00:06:51 - First Blazor Hybrid App & Architecture
00:21:40 - Get Code to Build Your First Blazor Hybrid App
00:26:38 - Blazor Hybrid Project Walkthrough
00:39:22 - Start to Build First Blazor Hybrid App
01:03:10 - Event Handling, Data Binding and Parameters (Slides)
01:09:00 - Add Monkey Data & Fluent UI Blazor Components
01:32:08 - Navigation, NavigationManager, .NET MAUI Pages (Slides)
01:39:19 - Navigation with NavigationManager
01:52:39 - Navigation with NavLinks
01:57:21 - Add .NET MAUI Pages & Components
02:21:11 - Access Platform Functionality (Slides)
02:27:57 - Check Network Connectivity
02:38:04 - Get User Location with Geolocation
02:49:09 - Integration with Other Apps
02:57:42 - App Theming, Light Theme, Dark Theme (Slides)
03:05:36 - JavaScript Interoperability with IJSRuntime
03:20:48 - Theming FluentUI Blazor Components
03:26:05 - Style Status Bar with .NET MAUI Community Toolkit
03:39:00 - .NET MAUI Light & Dark Theme with AppThemeBinding
03:42:58 - Sharing State & Creating Reusable Components (Slides)
03:47:27 - Implement Shared State Blazor Hybrid & .NET MAUI
04:02:47 - Create Reusable Razor Components
04:08:31 - CONGRATULATIONS!
React v17.0 منتشر شد
Today, we are releasing React 17! We’ve written at length about the role of the React 17 release and the changes it contains in the React 17 RC blog post. This post is a brief summary of it, so if you’ve already read the RC post, you can skip this one.
“I’ve written before about how React is the new default frontend framework, and how I don’t think most people using React on a regular basis realize quite how much it’s fallen behind.” High level thoughts about the React ‘bubble’ and some reasons to look beyond it, including a round up of some of the alternative options.
مقدمهای بر NET MAUI.
An Introduction to .NET MAUI For Mobile Development
.NET Multi-platform App UI (.NET MAUI) is a cross-platform framework for creating native mobile and desktop apps with C# and XAML.
.NET MAUI is open-source and is the evolution of Xamarin.Forms, extended from mobile to desktop scenarios, with UI controls rebuilt from the ground up for performance and extensibility. If you've previously used Xamarin.Forms to build cross-platform user interfaces, you'll notice many similarities with .NET MAUI. However, there are also some differences. Using .NET MAUI, you can create multi-platform apps using a single project, but you can add platform-specific source code and resources if necessary. One of the key aims of .NET MAUI is to enable you to implement as much of your app logic and UI layout as possible in a single code-base.
0:00 - Setup Visual Studio and MAUI Project
00:16:25 - Create MAUI Pages with C#
00:27:42 - Create MAUI Pages with XAML
00:32:28 - Explore MAUI Layouts
00:39:38 - Static Shared Resources
00:44:36 - Platform Specific Values
00:50:11 - Page Navigation
Next-gen database for powerful React and React Native apps that scales to 10,000s of records and remains fast
Build powerful React and React Native apps that scale from hundreds to tens of thousands of records and remain fast
چهار قانون بهتر برای طراحی نرمافزار
Kent’s rules, from Extreme Programming Explained are:
- Runs all the tests
- Has no duplicated logic. Be wary of hidden duplication like parallel class hierarchies
- States every intention important to the programmer
- Has the fewest possible classes and methods
In my experience, these don’t quite serve the needs of software design. My four rules might be that a well-designed system:
- is well-covered by passing tests.
- has no abstractions not directly needed by the program.
- has unambiguous behavior.
- requires the fewest number of concepts.