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Ed Charbeneau edited this page Apr 22, 2024 · 19 revisions

An interactive render mode is required. BlazorSize uses event callbacks from the browser's matchMedia API.

BlazorSize is an interactive component library for Blazor that uses JavaScript interop. BlazorSize is used to detect the Browser's current size, change in size, and test media queries at runtime.

BlazorSize was designed to allow Razor Components to implement adaptive rendering. Handle mobile/desktop rendering changes at runtime with ease and complement your apps CSS media queries with programmatic work flows.

Add the NuGet package

Package Manager

Install-Package BlazorPro.BlazorSize 

CLI

dotnet add package BlazorPro.BlazorSize 

.csproj

<PackageReference Include="BlazorPro.BlazorSize" Version="version-number" />

Import the namespace

Add a reference to the namespace in your _Imports.razor or at the top of a page.

@using BlazorPro.BlazorSize

Configure DI

In Program.cs register ResizeListener with the applications service collection. If you are using the Interactive Auto or Pre-rendering, you must register the service in each Program.cs (Client and Server).

services.AddMediaQueryService();

Add the MediaQueryList

The MediaQueryList is responsible for communicating with all MediaQuery components in your app. The MediaQueryList component will consolidate redundant media queries and manage resources so that unused event listeners are disposed of properly. Add a MediaQueryList to your application for the following scenarios:

  1. Add a MediaQueryList to your application's root interactive component applied by the @rendermode parameter.
See Example

For example, if the rendermode for the app is specified globally, the rendermode is set on the <Router ...> component instance in App.razor. Therefore, the MediaQueryList instance should be defined in Router.razor, or the root layout component (ex: MainLayout.razor).

App.razor

<Routes @rendermode="InteractiveAuto" />

Routes.razor

<MediaQueryList>
    <Router AppAssembly="typeof(Program).Assembly" AdditionalAssemblies="new[] { typeof(TestComponents.Pages.Index).Assembly }">
        <Found Context="routeData">
            <RouteView RouteData="routeData" DefaultLayout="typeof(Layout.MainLayout)" />
            <FocusOnNavigate RouteData="routeData" Selector="h1" />
        </Found>
    </Router>
</MediaQueryList>
See Example
  1. For per-page / per-component render modes, the MediaQueryList must be added to each component includes a @rendermode directive.

Every page that as @rendermode:

@* directives *@

<MediaQueryList>
    ... @* markup *@
    @* MediaQuery instances *@
</MediaQueryList>

@code { ... }

Add a MediaQuery and bind

Using the @bind-Matches directive we can easily bind to a browser's media query and respond to it.

See Example
@if (IsSmall)
{
    <WeatherCards Data="forecasts"></WeatherCards>
}
else
{
    <WeatherGrid Data="forecasts"></WeatherGrid>
}

@if (IsMedium)
{
    <span>Medium</span>
}

<MediaQuery Media="@Breakpoints.OnlyMedium" @bind-Matches="IsMedium" />
<MediaQuery Media="@Breakpoints.SmallDown" @bind-Matches="IsSmall" />

@code {
    WeatherForecast[] forecasts;

    bool IsMedium = false;
    bool IsSmall = false;

    protected override async Task OnInitializedAsync()
    {
        forecasts = await Http.GetFromJsonAsync<WeatherForecast[]>("sample-data/weather.json");
    }
}

No-Code Templates

The MediaQuery component can also use templates instead of the @bind directive. Templates are useful for swapping out UI bits when the screen size changes.

See Example
<MediaQuery Media="@Breakpoints.SmallDown">
    <Matched>
        <WeatherCards Data="forecasts"></WeatherCards>
    </Matched>
    <Unmatched>
        <WeatherGrid Data="forecasts"></WeatherGrid>
    </Unmatched>
</MediaQuery>

Helpers

Common media queries are already included as helpers to keep you out of the Bootstrap docs. Stay in your code longer and write cleaner statements too!

See Example
/// @media(min-width: 576px) { ... }
/// Small devices (landscape phones, 576px and up)
IsSmallUpMedia = await listener.MatchMedia(Breakpoints.SmallUp);

/// @media(min-width: 768px) { ... }
/// Medium devices (tablets, 768px and up)
IsMediumUpMedia = await listener.MatchMedia(Breakpoints.MediumUp);

// Large devices (desktops, 992px and up)
/// @media(min-width: 992px) { ... }
IsLargeUpMedia = await listener.MatchMedia(Breakpoints.LargeUp);

/// Extra large devices (large desktops, 1200px and up)
/// @media(min-width: 1200px) { ... }
IsXLargeUpMedia = await listener.MatchMedia(Breakpoints.XLargeUp);

/// Extra small devices (portrait phones, less than 576px)
/// @media(max-width: 575.98px) { ... }
IsXSmallDown = await listener.MatchMedia(Breakpoints.XSmallDown);

/// Small devices (landscape phones, less than 768px)
/// @media(max-width: 767.98px) { ... }
IsSmallDown = = await listener.MatchMedia(Breakpoints.SmallDown);

/// Medium devices (tablets, less than 992px)
/// @media(max-width: 991.98px) { ... }
IsMediumDown = = await listener.MatchMedia(Breakpoints.MediumDown);

/// Large devices (desktops, less than 1200px)
/// @media(max-width: 1199.98px) { ... }
LargeDown = = await listener.MatchMedia(Breakpoints.LargeDown);

/// Small devices (landscape phones, 576px and up)
/// @media(min-width: 576px) and(max-width: 767.98px) { ... }
IsSmallOnly = = await listener.MatchMedia(Breakpoints.OnlySmall);

/// Medium devices (tablets, 768px and up)
/// @media(min-width: 768px) and(max-width: 991.98px) { ... }
IsMediumOnly = = await listener.MatchMedia(Breakpoints.OnlyMedium);

/// Large devices (desktops, 992px and up)
/// @media(min-width: 992px) and(max-width: 1199.98px) { ... }
IsOnlyLarge = = await listener.MatchMedia(Breakpoints.OnlyLarge);

/// <summary>
/// Combines two media queries with the `and` keyword.
/// Values must include parenthesis.
/// Ex: (min-width: 992px) and (max-width: 1199.98px)
Breakpoints.Between(string min, string max)

Example:
string BetweenMediumAndLargeOnly => Breakpoints.Between(Breakpoints.MediumUp, Breakpoints.LargeDown);
// out: "(min-width: 768px) and (max-width: 1199.98px)"

IsBetweenMediumAndLargeOnly = await listener.MatchMedia(BetweenMediumAndLargeOnly);

Listening for the Resize event

The ResizeListener is a service that allows your application to listen for the browser's resize event. The ResizeListener is a throttled to improve performance and can be adjusted thru configuration. If you only need to respond the user's device or screen size the MediaQueryList & MediaQuery components provide a more performant experience.

Configure DI

In startup.cs register ResizeListener with the applications service collection.

services.AddScoped<IResizeListener, ResizeListener>();
// OR
// services.AddResizeListener();
// OR with options
//services.AddResizeListener(options =>
//                            {
//                                options.ReportRate = 300;
//                                options.EnableLogging = true;
//                                options.SuppressInitEvent = true;
//                            });

Usage

This example shows how to get the browsers width/height and check for media query matches. Depending on the matched media query the view can toggle between two components WeatherGrid or WeatherCards.

See Example
@inject IResizeListener listener
@implements IDisposable
@page "/fetchdata"

@using BlazorSize.Example.Data
@inject WeatherForecastService ForecastService

<h1>Weather forecast</h1>

<p>This component demonstrates adaptive rendering of a Blazor UI.</p>

<h3>Height: @browser.Height</h3>
<h3>Width: @browser.Width</h3>
<h3>MQ: @IsSmallMedia</h3>

@if (IsSmallMedia)
{
	<!-- Display a card layout on small devices -->
    <WeatherCards Data="forecasts"></WeatherCards>
}
else
{
	<!-- Display a full data grid on larger devices -->
    <WeatherGrid Data="forecasts"></WeatherGrid>
}

@code {
    WeatherForecast[] forecasts;

	// We can also capture the browser's width / height if needed. We hold the value here.
    BrowserWindowSize browser = new BrowserWindowSize();

    bool IsSmallMedia = false;

    protected override async Task OnInitializedAsync()
    {
        forecasts = await ForecastService.GetForecastAsync(DateTime.Now);
    }

    protected override void OnAfterRender(bool firstRender)
    {

        if (firstRender)
        {
			// Subscribe to the OnResized event. This will do work when the browser is resized.
            listener.OnResized += WindowResized;
        }
    }

    void IDisposable.Dispose()
    {
		// Always use IDisposable in your component to unsubscribe from the event.
		// Be a good citizen and leave things how you found them. 
		// This way event handlers aren't called when nobody is listening.
        listener.OnResized -= WindowResized;
    }

	// This method will be called when the window resizes.
	// It is ONLY called when the user stops dragging the window's edge. (It is already throttled to protect your app from perf. nightmares)
    async void WindowResized(object _, BrowserWindowSize window)
    {
		// Get the browsers's width / height
        browser = window;

		// Check a media query to see if it was matched. We can do this at any time, but it's best to check on each resize
        IsSmallMedia = await listener.MatchMedia(Breakpoints.SmallDown);

		// We're outside of the component's lifecycle, be sure to let it know it has to re-render.
        StateHasChanged();
    }

}

Reference the JavaScript interop

.NET 3.x is not supported by BlazorSize 5.0 or higher

This is only needed for .NET 3.2 or below

Add the JavaScript interop to your application's index.html or _hosts.cshtml

    <!--<script src="_content/BlazorPro.BlazorSize/blazorSize.js" type="module"></script>-->
    <script src="_content/BlazorPro.BlazorSize/blazorSize.min.js"></script>