DotNetJS 0.3.8
See the version list below for details.
dotnet add package DotNetJS --version 0.3.8
NuGet\Install-Package DotNetJS -Version 0.3.8
<PackageReference Include="DotNetJS" Version="0.3.8" />
paket add DotNetJS --version 0.3.8
#r "nuget: DotNetJS, 0.3.8"
// Install DotNetJS as a Cake Addin #addin nuget:?package=DotNetJS&version=0.3.8 // Install DotNetJS as a Cake Tool #tool nuget:?package=DotNetJS&version=0.3.8
DotNetJS
This project is dedicated to providing user-friendly workflow for consuming .NET C# programs and libraries in any JavaScript environment, be it web browsers, Node.js or custom restricted spaces, like web extensions for VS Code.
The solution is based on two main components:
- JavaScript/dotnet-runtime (npm). Consumes compiled C# assemblies and .NET runtime WebAssembly module to provide C# interoperability layer in JavaScript. The library is environment-agnostic — it doesn't depend on platform-specific APIs, like browser DOM or node modules and can be imported as CommonJS or ECMAScript module or consumed via script tag in browsers.
- DotNet/DotNetJS (NuGet). Provides JavaScript interoperability layer in C# and packs project output into single-file JavaScript library via MSBuild task. Produced library contains dotnet-runtime initialized with the project assemblies and ready to be used as interoperability layer for the packaged C# project. Can optionally emit type definitions to bootstrap TypeScript development.
Quick Start
In C# project configuration file specify Microsoft.NET.Sdk.BlazorWebAssembly
SDK and import DotNetJS
NuGet package:
<Project Sdk="Microsoft.NET.Sdk.BlazorWebAssembly">
<PropertyGroup>
<TargetFramework>net6.0</TargetFramework>
</PropertyGroup>
<ItemGroup>
<PackageReference Include="DotNetJS" Version="*"/>
</ItemGroup>
</Project>
To associate a JavaScript function with a C# method use JSFunction
attribute. To expose a C# method to JavaScript, use JSInvokable
attribute:
using System;
using DotNetJS;
using Microsoft.JSInterop;
namespace HelloWorld;
partial class Program
{
// Entry point is invoked by the JavaScript runtime on boot.
public static void Main ()
{
// Invoking 'dotnet.HelloWorld.GetHostName()' JavaScript function.
var hostName = GetHostName();
// Writing to JavaScript host console.
Console.WriteLine($"Hello {hostName}, DotNet here!");
}
[JSFunction] // The interoperability code is auto-generated.
public static partial string GetHostName ();
[JSInvokable] // The method is invoked from JavaScript.
public static string GetName () => "DotNet";
}
Publish the project with dotnet publish
. A single-file dotnet.js
library will be produced under the "bin" directory. Consume the library depending on the environment:
Browser
<script src="dotnet.js"></script>
<script>
// Providing implementation for 'GetHostName' function declared in 'HelloWorld' C# assembly.
dotnet.HelloWorld.GetHostName = () => "Browser";
window.onload = async function () {
// Booting the DotNet runtime and invoking entry point.
await dotnet.boot();
// Invoking 'GetName()' C# method defined in 'HelloWorld' assembly.
const guestName = dotnet.HelloWorld.GetName();
console.log(`Welcome, ${guestName}! Enjoy your global space.`);
};
</script>
Node.js
// Import as CommonJS module.
const dotnet = require("dotnet");
// ... or as ECMAScript module in node v17 or later.
import dotnet from "dotnet.js";
// Providing implementation for 'GetHostName' function declared in 'HelloWorld' C# assembly.
dotnet.HelloWorld.GetHostName = () => "Node.js";
(async function () {
// Booting the DotNet runtime and invoking entry point.
await dotnet.boot();
// Invoking 'GetName()' C# method defined in 'HelloWorld' assembly.
const guestName = dotnet.HelloWorld.GetName();
console.log(`Welcome, ${guestName}! Enjoy your module space.`);
})();
Example Projects
Find the following sample projects in this repository:
- Hello World — Consume the produced library as a global import in browser, CommonJS or ES module in node.
- Web Extension — Consume the library in VS Code web extension, which works in both web and standalone versions of the IDE.
- Runtime Tests — Integration tests featuring various usage scenarios: async method invocations, interop with instances, sending raw byte arrays, streaming, etc.
Build Properties
Specify following optional properties in .csproj to customize the build:
<EmitSourceMap>true</EmitSourceMap>
— emit JavaScript source map file.<EmitTypes>true</EmitTypes>
— emit TypeScript type definitions file.
For example, following configuration will emit source map and type definitions:
<Project Sdk="Microsoft.NET.Sdk.BlazorWebAssembly">
<PropertyGroup>
<TargetFramework>net6.0</TargetFramework>
<EmitSourceMap>true</EmitSourceMap>
<EmitTypes>true</EmitTypes>
</PropertyGroup>
<ItemGroup>
<PackageReference Include="DotNetJS" Version="*"/>
</ItemGroup>
</Project>
Compiling Runtime
To compile and test the runtime run the following in order (under dotnet-runtime folder):
scripts/install-emsdk.sh
scripts/compile-runtime.sh
npm build
scripts/compile-test.sh
npm test
Publishing Runtime
A memo for the publishing process after modifying dotnet-runtime:
- Bump NPM version on
JavaScript/dotnet-runtime/package.json
and:
npm run build
scripts/publish-package.sh
- Bump NuGet version on
DotNet/DotNetJS/DotNetJS.csproj
and:
dotnet pack -c Release --output bin
dotnet nuget push bin/DotNetJS.{VER}.nupkg --api-key {KEY} --source https://api.nuget.org/v3/index.json
Product | Versions Compatible and additional computed target framework versions. |
---|---|
.NET | net6.0 is compatible. net6.0-android was computed. net6.0-ios was computed. net6.0-maccatalyst was computed. net6.0-macos was computed. net6.0-tvos was computed. net6.0-windows was computed. net7.0 was computed. net7.0-android was computed. net7.0-ios was computed. net7.0-maccatalyst was computed. net7.0-macos was computed. net7.0-tvos was computed. net7.0-windows was computed. net8.0 was computed. 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. |
-
net6.0
- Microsoft.AspNetCore.Components.WebAssembly (>= 6.0.0)
NuGet packages (1)
Showing the top 1 NuGet packages that depend on DotNetJS:
Package | Downloads |
---|---|
Plotly.WPF
Plotly.js in a WPF Control |
GitHub repositories
This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.
Version | Downloads | Last updated | |
---|---|---|---|
0.23.4 | 1,788 | 5/14/2023 | |
0.23.3 | 871 | 2/21/2023 | |
0.23.2 | 288 | 2/21/2023 | |
0.23.1 | 554 | 1/27/2023 | |
0.23.0 | 344 | 1/27/2023 | |
0.22.0 | 452 | 1/21/2023 | |
0.21.1 | 382 | 12/23/2022 | |
0.21.0 | 462 | 12/5/2022 | |
0.20.0 | 404 | 12/4/2022 | |
0.19.0 | 394 | 11/24/2022 | |
0.18.0 | 828 | 11/20/2022 | |
0.17.1 | 529 | 10/15/2022 | |
0.17.0 | 480 | 10/10/2022 | |
0.16.0 | 554 | 10/1/2022 | |
0.15.1 | 500 | 9/1/2022 | |
0.15.0 | 554 | 8/24/2022 | |
0.14.0 | 599 | 7/1/2022 | |
0.13.8 | 574 | 6/6/2022 | |
0.13.7 | 455 | 6/4/2022 | |
0.13.5 | 453 | 6/4/2022 | |
0.13.4 | 480 | 6/4/2022 | |
0.13.3 | 444 | 6/3/2022 | |
0.13.2 | 480 | 5/24/2022 | |
0.13.1 | 491 | 5/23/2022 | |
0.13.0 | 489 | 5/22/2022 | |
0.12.0 | 487 | 5/21/2022 | |
0.11.0 | 506 | 5/21/2022 | |
0.10.1 | 468 | 5/19/2022 | |
0.10.0 | 546 | 5/1/2022 | |
0.9.2 | 463 | 4/29/2022 | |
0.9.1 | 491 | 4/17/2022 | |
0.9.0 | 461 | 4/8/2022 | |
0.8.2 | 525 | 3/22/2022 | |
0.8.1 | 475 | 3/9/2022 | |
0.8.0 | 488 | 2/20/2022 | |
0.7.3 | 628 | 2/16/2022 | |
0.6.3 | 517 | 2/12/2022 | |
0.6.2 | 497 | 2/9/2022 | |
0.5.4 | 494 | 2/8/2022 | |
0.5.3 | 602 | 2/1/2022 | |
0.5.2 | 528 | 1/17/2022 | |
0.5.1 | 485 | 1/13/2022 | |
0.5.0 | 514 | 1/13/2022 | |
0.4.1 | 353 | 1/10/2022 | |
0.4.0 | 359 | 12/24/2021 | |
0.3.13 | 337 | 12/23/2021 | |
0.3.12 | 655 | 12/4/2021 | |
0.3.11 | 924 | 12/1/2021 | |
0.3.8 | 367 | 11/30/2021 | |
0.2.5 | 890 | 11/21/2021 | |
0.2.0 | 501 | 11/19/2021 | |
0.1.0 | 375 | 11/18/2021 |