ReactJS.NET is a library that makes it easier to use Babel along with Facebook's React and JSX from C#.
- On-the-fly JSX to JavaScript compilation via Babel
- JSX to JavaScript compilation via popular minification/combination libraries:
- Server-side component rendering to make your initial render super-fast (experimental!)
- Runs on Linux via Mono and V8
- Supports both ASP.NET 4.0/4.5 and ASP.NET 5
Install the package
Install-Package React.Web.Mvc4 # For ASP.NET MVC 4 or 5
Install-Package React.AspNet # For ASP.NET MVC 6 (ASP.NET 5)
Create JSX files
// /Scripts/HelloWorld.jsx
var HelloWorld = React.createClass({
render: function () {
return (
<div>Hello {this.props.name}</div>
);
}
});
Reference the JSX files from your HTML
<script src="@Url.Content("~/Scripts/HelloWorld.jsx")"></script>
Now you can use the HelloWorld
component.
For information on more advanced topics (including precompilation and server-side rendering), check out the documentation
When building your own copy of ReactJS.NET (for example, if implementing a new
feature or fixing a bug), your first build always needs to be done using the
build script (dev-build.bat
) as this generates a few files required by the
build (such as SharedAssemblyVersionInfo.cs
). Once this build is completed,
you can open React.sln
in Visual Studio and compile directly from Visual
Studio. Please refer to the documentation page on
contributing for more information on
contributing to ReactJS.NET.
Note that the build requires you to have Git installed. If you do not want to
install Git, you may remove the GitVersion
task from build.proj
.