Blazor.SsrButton 1.0.0

dotnet add package Blazor.SsrButton --version 1.0.0                
NuGet\Install-Package Blazor.SsrButton -Version 1.0.0                
This command is intended to be used within the Package Manager Console in Visual Studio, as it uses the NuGet module's version of Install-Package.
<PackageReference Include="Blazor.SsrButton" Version="1.0.0" />                
For projects that support PackageReference, copy this XML node into the project file to reference the package.
paket add Blazor.SsrButton --version 1.0.0                
#r "nuget: Blazor.SsrButton, 1.0.0"                
#r directive can be used in F# Interactive and Polyglot Notebooks. Copy this into the interactive tool or source code of the script to reference the package.
// Install Blazor.SsrButton as a Cake Addin
#addin nuget:?package=Blazor.SsrButton&version=1.0.0

// Install Blazor.SsrButton as a Cake Tool
#tool nuget:?package=Blazor.SsrButton&version=1.0.0                

SsrButton Component for Blazor

Overview

The SsrButton is a versatile and customizable button component for Blazor applications. It supports both server-side rendering (SSR) and client-side rendering, making it ideal for use in various Blazor project types.

Features

  • Customizable button text and color
  • Support for icons through RenderFragment
  • Flexible URL handling (relative and absolute URLs)
  • Compatible with both SSR and client-side rendering

Getting Started

Demo

Installation

  • Install the latest NuGet Package

Using Package Manager

Install-Package Blazor.SsrButton

Using .NET CLI

dotnet add package Blazor.SsrButton

Using MS VS Manage NuGet packages, search for Blazor.SsrButton

Usage

Here's how to use the SsrButton component in your Blazor pages or components:

  • Simple: current page as target. image
<SsrButton Text="Goto Home"/>
  • Change Colors image
<SsrButton Text="Color Yellow+Black" BgColor="#FFFFE0" TextColor="#000000"/>
  • Use relative URL. Go to the `weather' route for the current location image
<SsrButton Text="Weather" Href="weather"/>
  • Use relative URL with unicode icon ( or as code &#9925;) image
<SsrButton Text="Weather" Href="weather">
   <IconTemplate>
     <span>⛅</span>
   </IconTemplate>
</SsrButton>
  • With image icon and absolute URL.
<SsrButton Href="https://example.com" ButtonText="Counter" BgColor="#4CAF50">
   <IconTemplate>
       <img src="/images/example.png" alt="Counter Icon" />
   </IconTemplate>
</SsrButton>
Component Parameters
  • Href (string): The URL the button should link to. Can be relative or absolute.
  • Text (string): The text to display on the button.
  • BgColor (string): The background color of the button (CSS color value).
  • TextColor (string): The text color of the button (CSS color value). Default white
  • Parameters (List<(string Key, string Value)>): Additional query parameters
  • IconTemplate (RenderFragment): Optional icon content to display before the button text.
Parameters and URL-based State Management

The SsrButton component does not directly handle events; instead, it navigates to different URLs with query parameters to simulate state changes. For example, the well-known Blazor counter can operate in SSR mode too by updating the URL with a new count parameter on each click. However, this method results in a complete page reload, which may impact responsiveness compared to client-side interactivity.

Note:To enhance security, you can sign parameters to prevent user modifications via the address bar.

Parameters example

@inject NavigationManager NavigationManager

<h2>Counter '@Id'</h2>

<p>Current count: @_currentCount</p>

<SsrButton 
    Text="Click me" 
    Parameters="dynamicParameters" 
/>

@code {
    [Parameter] public string Id { get; set; } = "";
    private int _currentCount = 0;

    private DynamicParameters dynamicParameters { get; set; } = new DynamicParameters();

    protected override void OnInitialized()
    {
        var uri = new Uri(NavigationManager.Uri);
        var query = System.Web.HttpUtility.ParseQueryString(uri.Query);
        
        if (int.TryParse(query[$"count_{Id}"], out int count))
        {
            _currentCount = count;
        }

        dynamicParameters.AddParameter($"count_{Id}", (_currentCount + 1).ToString());
    }
}

How does it work?

1. Component Structure:

  • Injection:

    • @inject NavigationManager NavigationManager: Injects the NavigationManager service to access URL information.
  • Counter Display:

    • <h2>Counter '@Id'</h2>: Displays a heading with the Id parameter.
    • <p>Current count: @_currentCount</p>: Shows the current count.
  • Button:

    • <SsrButton ... />: Renders a button with dynamic parameters.

2. Code Block:

  • Parameter:

    • [Parameter] public string Id { get; set; } = "";: Defines an Id parameter for the component.
  • State:

    • private int _currentCount = 0;: Stores the current count.
    • private DynamicParameters dynamicParameters = new DynamicParameters();: Stores dynamic parameters for the button.
  • OnInitialized:

    • Parsing URL Query:

      • Extracts the query string from the current URL.
      • Tries to parse the count_{Id} parameter from the query string.
      • If successful, updates the _currentCount state.
    • Updating Dynamic Parameters:

      • Increments the _currentCount.
      • Adds the updated count_{Id} parameter to the dynamicParameters object.
      • Handles other parameters as needed (not shown in the code snippet).

Functionality:

  1. Initial Render:

    • The component renders with the initial _currentCount value (0).
  2. Button Click:

    • The SsrButton is clicked.
    • The dynamicParameters are passed to the server-side rendering process.
    • The server-side logic processes the parameters, including the updated count_{Id}.
    • The browser navigates to a new URL, for example: https://localhost:7252/counter-ssr?count_id1=1
    • This triggers a new request to the server with the updated query parameter.
  3. Server-Side Rendering:

    • The server receives the new request with the updated URL.
    • The OnInitialized method is called again, parsing the new URL.
    • It extracts the new count value from the query string (count_id1=1).
    • The _currentCount is updated with this new value.
    • The server renders the component with the updated _currentCount value.
  4. Client-Side Update:

    • The browser receives a complete new HTML page from the server.
    • The entire page is reloaded, replacing the previous content.
    • The new page includes the updated counter component with the new count.
    • The UI reflects the new count as part of this full page refresh.

The entire page, including the updated counter component, is rendered on the server and sent to the client as a complete HTML document. This process leverages server-side rendering to update the component state, ensuring that the counter value persists across page reloads and can be shared via URL. Each click essentially results in a new page load with an incremented counter value in the URL, which is then used to update the component's state. Key Points:

  • URL-Based State: The component leverages the URL query string to persist state across page loads and browser sessions.
  • Server-Side Rendering: The SsrButton ensures that the button click and state update are handled on the server, providing a more reliable and consistent user experience.
  • Dynamic Parameters: The dynamicParameters object allows for flexible parameter passing to the server-side rendering process.

Additional Considerations:

  • Security: Ensure proper validation and sanitization of URL parameters to prevent potential security vulnerabilities like cross-site scripting (XSS).
  • Error Handling: Implement error handling mechanisms to gracefully handle cases where the count_{Id} parameter is not found or cannot be parsed.
  • Performance: For large-scale applications, consider optimization techniques to minimize server-side rendering overhead, such as caching and code splitting.

Additional Styling

If you want to change the position of the icon, add the following CSS to your stylesheet: image

.button-icon {
    margin-left: 5px; /* Adds space to the left side of the icon */
    order: 1; /* Moves the icon to the end of the flex layout */
}

Contributing

Contributions are welcome! Please feel free to submit a Pull Request.

Product Compatible and additional computed target framework versions.
.NET net8.0 is compatible.  net8.0-android was computed.  net8.0-browser was computed.  net8.0-ios was computed.  net8.0-maccatalyst was computed.  net8.0-macos was computed.  net8.0-tvos was computed.  net8.0-windows was computed. 
Compatible target framework(s)
Included target framework(s) (in package)
Learn more about Target Frameworks and .NET Standard.

NuGet packages

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Version Downloads Last updated
1.0.0 77 11/7/2024