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The name, "Blazor", as explained by Steve Sanderson, is a portmanteau of the words "Browser" and "Razor". (from the Razor syntax being used) Blazor got admitted as an official open-source project by Microsoft, and in 2018, as part of .NET Core 3.1, Blazor Server was released to the public.
Blazor is a recent (optional) component to support WebAssembly and since version 5.0, it has dropped support for some old web browsers. While current Microsoft Edge works, the legacy version of it, i.e. " Microsoft Edge Legacy " and Internet Explorer 11 was dropped when you use Blazor.
Form processing and validation; Session state management via different backends: encrypted cookies, files, cache, database and distributed solutions. Internationalization and localization, [2] including support of right-to-left languages. CppCMS contributed its localization module to the Boost project. [3]
ASP.NET is a server-side web-application framework designed for web development to produce dynamic web pages.It was developed by Microsoft to allow programmers to build dynamic web sites, applications and services.
Client- and server-side validation; Contains various security features to avoid Cross-site scripting and Cross-site request forgery (CSRF) vulnerabilities; Includes a compact C++ ORM-layer ("Wt::Dbo") Uses the WebSocket networking protocol, if available, for Client–server model of communication, with fallbacks to Ajax or plain web page rendering
After the MVP release, WebAssembly added support for multithreading and garbage collection (WasmGC, and web browsers including Safari have added support for it), [56] which allowed more efficient compilation for garbage-collecting programming languages like C# (supported via Blazor), F# (supported via Bolero [57] with help of Blazor) and Python ...
ASP.NET Web Forms is a web application framework and one of several programming models supported by the Microsoft ASP.NET technology. Web Forms applications can be written in any programming language which supports the Common Language Runtime , such as C# or Visual Basic .
Some of Test Studio's features include: Scriptless test recording and playback; Cross-browser test execution – Internet Explorer, Firefox, Chrome and Microsoft Edge; Support for HTML, AJAX, Silverlight, WPF and ASP.NET MVC application testing