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Mastering Blazor WebAssembly

You're reading from   Mastering Blazor WebAssembly A step-by-step guide to developing advanced single-page applications with Blazor WebAssembly

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803235103
Length 370 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Ahmad Mozaffar Ahmad Mozaffar
Author Profile Icon Ahmad Mozaffar
Ahmad Mozaffar
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Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Blazor WebAssembly Essentials
2. Chapter 1: Understanding the Anatomy of a Blazor WebAssembly Project FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Components in Blazor 4. Chapter 3: Developing Advanced Components in Blazor 5. Part 2: App Parts and Features
6. Chapter 4: Navigation and Routing 7. Chapter 5: Capturing User Input with Forms and Validation 8. Chapter 6: Consuming JavaScript in Blazor 9. Chapter 7: Managing Application State 10. Chapter 8: Consuming Web APIs from Blazor WebAssembly 11. Chapter 9: Authenticatiwng and Authorizing Users in Blazor 12. Chapter 10: Handling Errors in Blazor WebAssembly 13. Part 3: Optimization and Deployment
14. Chapter 11: Giving Your App a Speed Boost 15. Chapter 12: RenderTree in Blazor 16. Chapter 13: Testing Blazor WebAssembly Apps 17. Chapter 14: Publishing Blazor WebAssembly Apps 18. Chapter 15: What’s Next? 19. Index 20. Other Books You May Enjoy

Sending a GET request

Let’s learn more about calling web APIs and improve our project even further. When you run the project, it redirects you by default to the index page, where a list of books will be shown on the UI. The books are fetched from a local in-memory collection inside the LocalBooksService.cs class within the Services folder. We need to replace that fixed data list with a web API call that retrieves the books from the API. Unlike the GET request we saw in the FetchData component, this one will be written step by step, and we will have better control over the response:

  1. As we learned earlier, before we write the code, we need to understand the targeted endpoint. Navigate to the web API Swagger page and expand the /Books GET request to see what it returns in both success and failure cases.
  2. You can open Postman and send a GET request to https://localhost:7188/books to see the response it retrieves.
Figure 8.8 – GET /Books request responses in web API

Figure 8.8 – GET...

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