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Web Development with Blazor

You're reading from   Web Development with Blazor A practical guide to building interactive UIs with C# 12 and .NET 8

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781835465912
Length 366 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Author (1):
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Jimmy Engström Jimmy Engström
Author Profile Icon Jimmy Engström
Jimmy Engström
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Toc

Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Hello Blazor 2. Creating Your First Blazor App FREE CHAPTER 3. Managing State – Part 1 4. Understanding Basic Blazor Components 5. Creating Advanced Blazor Components 6. Building Forms with Validation 7. Creating an API 8. Authentication and Authorization 9. Sharing Code and Resources 10. JavaScript Interop 11. Managing State – Part 2 12. Debugging the Code 13. Testing 14. Deploying to Production 15. Moving from, or Combining with, an Existing Site 16. Going Deeper into WebAssembly 17. Examining Source Generators 18. Visiting .NET MAUI 19. Where to Go from Here 20. Other Books You May Enjoy
21. Index

AOT compilation

By default, the only thing that is running as WebAssembly in a Blazor WebAssembly app is the runtime. Everything else is ordinary .NET assemblies running on the browser using a .NET Intermediate Language (IL) interpreter implemented in WebAssembly.

I was not too fond of that when I started playing around with Blazor; it felt wasteful to run everything using IL instead of something the browser would understand natively. Then, I thought the browser was running the same code as I would on the server. The same code in the browser! That is pretty amazing!

However, we have the option to compile directly to WebAssembly; this is called ahead-of-time (AOT) compilation. It has a downside: the app download size will increase, but it will run and load faster.

An AOT-compiled app is generally twice the size of an IL-compiled app. AOT will take the .NET code and compile that directly into WebAssembly.

AOT does not trim managed assemblies, and more code is needed...

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