Shiny Framework Libraries

These libraries were written by the author for the author and thus are not open to issues, enhancements, or anything in between.

Shiny.Framework

Framework combines the best of MVVM using Prism & ReactiveUI while also combining Shiny. Find the sample at [https://github.com/shinyorg/samples/tree/main/Integration-Best-Prism-RXUI]

Features

  • No guess work about what dependency injection mechanism to install - Framework uses DryIoc under the hood, but guess what.... you'll NEVER know it even if this changes one day
  • Localization - a simple to use localization framework that can be used everywhere including your viewmodels! Localization DONE RIGHT!
  • Global Navigator - allows you to inject a global navigator that you can use safely from your Shiny delegates. Will ignore navigation requests when in the background
  • Global Command Exception Handler - do you like ReactiveCommand, so do I... this little service brings together Shiny's logging services + localization (from above) + dialogs (also from above) into one singular place
  • ViewModel Validation using Data Annotations by default (but can be changed to 3rd party by implementing IValidationService)

Nugets

Release NuGet
Stable Nuget
Preview Nuget (with prereleases)

The Ultimate In Base ViewModels

Inherit Shiny.ViewModel on your viewmodel. You will instantly gain the following:

  • Features
    • Dialogs is built right in
    • Localization is built right in (you need to register it though, we will cover that in the localization section)
    • All of the Prism lifecycle stuff waiting to be used (just type override to see everything)
    • All of the Reactive setup (WhenAny, WhenAnyValue) built right in
    • Low Effort Validation

Localization

This uses Shiny.Extensions.Localization - go to https://shinylib.net/apiservices for more info on this library

public static class MauiProgram
{
	public static MauiApp CreateMauiApp()
	{
		var builder = MauiApp
			.CreateBuilder()
            .UseShinyFramework();

        builder.Services.ConfigureLocalization(x => x
            .AddResource("Samples.Resources.Strings", this.GetType().Assembly, "Strings")
            .AddResource("Samples.Resources.Enums", this.GetType().Assembly, "Enums")
        );

		return builder.Build();
	}
}

Global Command Exception Handler

Global command exception handling is something provided by ReactiveUI. It saves you the hassle of putting a standard try {} catch (Exception ex) {} trap all in every command.

Shiny builds on this by adding logging and a standard dialog message to handle trap-all scenarios. To use it, simply add the following to your framework startup:

public static class MauiProgram
{
	public static MauiApp CreateMauiApp()
	{
		var builder = MauiApp
			.CreateBuilder()
            .UseShinyFramework();

        builder.Services.AddGlobalCommandExceptionHandler(options =>
        {
#if DEBUG
            options.AlertType = ErrorAlertType.FullError; // this will show the full error in a dialog during debug
            options.LogError = false;
#else
            // you will need localization to be registered to use this
            options.AlertType = ErrorAlertType.Localize; // you can use NoLocalize which will send a standard english message instead
            options.LogError = true;
            options.IgnoreTokenCancellations = true;
            options.LocalizeErrorTitleKey = "YourLocalizationTitleKey";
            options.LocalizeErrorBodyKey = "YourLocalizationErrorBodyMessageKey";
#endif
        });
    }
}

ViewModel Validation

Validation is often the painful act of doing the same thing over and over and over. There are tools out there that help such as FluentValidation and Data Annotations, but nothing out of the box.

Shiny.Framework now includes optional support for DataAnnotations (with a pluggable model under IValidationService);

Data Annotations is currently the only out-of-box provider for validation. Take a look at Microsoft Data Annotations for more documentation on Data Annotations

Setup

NOTE: we recommend usage of ReactiveUI.Fody for the use of the [Reactive] attribute which removes the boilerplate code for MVVM properties

First, we need to tell Shiny.Framework to wire in the validation service to Data Annotations by doing the following in your shiny startup

public static class MauiProgram
{
	public static MauiApp CreateMauiApp()
	{
		var builder = MauiApp
			.CreateBuilder()
            .UseShinyFramework();

        builder.Services.UseDataAnnotationValidation();
    }
}
    

Now, in your viewmodel:

public class MyViewModel : Shiny.ViewModel
{
    [Reactive]
    [EmailAddress(ErrorMessage = "Invalid Email")]
    public string Email { get; set; }


    [Reactive]
    [MinLength(3, ErrorMessage = "Min 3 Characters")]
    [MaxLength(5, ErrorMessage = "Max 5 Characters")]
    public string LengthTest { get; set; }
}

Commands

public class MyViewModel : Shiny.ViewModel
{
    public MyViewModel() {
        this.Command = ReactiveCommand.Create(() => {}, this.WhenValid());
    }

    public ICommand Command { get; }

    // add some data annotated MVVM properties below
}

Localization

Data annotations actually stinks for pluggable localization. Shiny is big on pluggability so we've "hacked" our way around this one. Simply register your localization manager and follow this slight hack

We recommand creating a secondary section called Validation. Take a look at the sample app within this repo for examples.

public class MyViewModel : Shiny.ViewModel
{
    [Reactive]
    [EmailAddress(ErrorMessage = "localize:Validation:Required")]
    public string Email { get; set; }
}

NOTE: the use of "localize:" if front the localization key. Also note, that uses the fully qualified path to your localization value (ie Section:Key)