A complaint from Microsoft officials:
As far as I'm aware, we don't have plans to introduce Vue-specific features. This isn't because we have anything against Vue, but rather just to limit the growth in the number of frameworks that we're maintaining support for. The dev team only has a finite capacity for handling third-party concepts, and last year we made the strategic choice to focus on only Angular and React.
Microsoft won't stop our enthusiasm for vuejs
The Microsoft's dev team only has a finite capacity for handling third-party concepts, but we chinese men don't. Men can never say no.
- You can use Visual Studio to create a project with React.js:
- Or execute
dotnet new react
command in Command Line Tools:
- Remove
ClientApp
folder:
- Create new vue template project in root folder:
- Rename all
ClientApp
folder to our vue project name:
Startup.cs
public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
{
...
services.AddSpaStaticFiles(configuration =>
{
// configuration.RootPath = "ClientApp/build";
configuration.RootPath = "admin/build";
});
}
public void Configure(IApplicationBuilder app, IWebHostEnvironment env)
{
...
app.UseSpa(spa =>
{
// spa.Options.SourcePath = "ClientApp";
spa.Options.SourcePath = "admin";
...
});
}
NetCoreVue.csproj
<PropertyGroup>
<TargetFramework>netcoreapp3.0</TargetFramework>
<TypeScriptCompileBlocked>true</TypeScriptCompileBlocked>
<TypeScriptToolsVersion>Latest</TypeScriptToolsVersion>
<IsPackable>false</IsPackable>
<!-- <SpaRoot>ClientApp\</SpaRoot> -->
<SpaRoot>admin\</SpaRoot>
<DefaultItemExcludes>$(DefaultItemExcludes);$(SpaRoot)node_modules\**</DefaultItemExcludes>
</PropertyGroup>
- Add
VueCliMiddleware
package from nuget:
Run
dotnet add package VueCliMiddleware
command in the Package Manager Console.
- Change
ReactDevelopmentServer
toVueCli
:
public void Configure(IApplicationBuilder app, IWebHostEnvironment env)
{
...
app.UseSpa(spa =>
{
spa.Options.SourcePath = "admin";
if (env.IsDevelopment())
{
// spa.UseReactDevelopmentServer(npmScript: "start");
spa.UseVueCli();
}
});
}
- Change React build floder '
build
' to Vue build folder 'dist
':
Startup.cs
public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
{
...
services.AddSpaStaticFiles(configuration =>
{
// configuration.RootPath = "admin/build";
configuration.RootPath = "admin/dist";
});
}
NetCoreVue.csproj
<ItemGroup>
<!-- <DistFiles Include="$(SpaRoot)build\**" /> -->
<DistFiles Include="$(SpaRoot)dist\**" />
<ResolvedFileToPublish Include="@(DistFiles->'%(FullPath)')" Exclude="@(ResolvedFileToPublish)">
<RelativePath>%(DistFiles.Identity)</RelativePath>
<CopyToPublishDirectory>PreserveNewest</CopyToPublishDirectory>
<ExcludeFromSingleFile>true</ExcludeFromSingleFile>
</ResolvedFileToPublish>
</ItemGroup>
- Run to test
Run
dotnet run
in Command Line Tools to run the app.
- Install
axios
plugin:
Run
vue add axios
command in Command Line Tools to install axios.
- Run
vue add router
command in Command Line Tools to install vue-router.
- add
WeatherForecast.vue
in views folder:
<template>
<div class="weather">
<table className='table table-striped' aria-labelledby="tabelLabel">
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Date</th>
<th>Temp. (C)</th>
<th>Temp. (F)</th>
<th>Summary</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr v-for="(forecast,index) in forecasts" :key="forecast.date">
<td>{{forecast.date}}</td>
<td>{{forecast.temperatureC}}</td>
<td>{{forecast.temperatureF}}</td>
<td>{{forecast.summary}}</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
</template>
<script>
export default {
name: 'WeatherForecast',
data() {
return {
forecasts:[]
};
},
created() {
this.axios.get("/weatherforecast").then(res => {
// console.log(res.data);
this.forecasts = res.data;
});
}
}
</script>
<!-- Add "scoped" attribute to limit CSS to this component only -->
<style scoped>
body{
text-align:center;
}
.weather {
margin: 0 auto;
}
</style>
- Add a new router:
export default new Router({
mode: 'history',
base: process.env.BASE_URL,
routes: [
...
{
path: '/weather',
name: 'weather',
component: () => import('./views/WeatherForecast.vue')
}
]
})
- Run to view the last result: