@Developer00 Your Xamarin app hosts a WebView which shows the UI. You can hook up a listener in your Xamarin C# that listens to script events in the JS.
So.. a SPA is a way to build an app. It doesn't mean "There are no pages", it just means that every component of the app is contained in one file, and it doesn't follow a traditional request/response manner. Because if you do that... and you're offline... you can't display ANYTHING because the requests just fail.
A SPA prevents all that.
For example... see my hobby app github.com/mangaloyalty/mangaloyalty. It has some screenshots. Those are clearly different pages, but... it's a SPA, meaning when you load the app, it already knows how to layout all different pages and just makes data requests.
Yes. A mobile app must always be designed to be self-contained. It may have to ask for DATA online (what products are for sale, how much are they, is it in stock) but NEVER how the DATA IS DISPLAYED.
I haven't touched XF in a while so I don't know if there's a better way by now, but the method to call the C# host from JS is to create a URL that maps to your C# call - say, "http://fake-myhost?param=x", etc. From your host, you catch the Navigating event, see if it's in the format of a call, and if so, extract hte parameters, call the function, and cancel the navigation.
@Developer00 When you're writing XAML, you have a clear separation between the layout (in XAML, compiled and deployed to the client) and the data (which the code pulls in). With HTML, classically speaking, both the layout and the data are on the server, and every time you navigate, you have to get both. SPA simply means pulling the client code once, and from there on, it's all data.
@Developer00 Components are actually a huge hole in web development. There isn't a standard way to write reusable components. Frameworks like React or Angular each have their own way of doing it, but vanilla JS/HTML? Nope.
@Squirrelkiller An Async method is simply a method that returns a Task. When you call it from a sync method, it will return the first time it hits an "await" call, returning a Task.
@Squirrelkiller Let's say you have a button with <Button Click='ClickHandler'>, and now you want ClickHandler to be async - changing it to a Task means your XAML no longer works.
But my boss told me to take the afternoon and do whatever I want because he didn't actually believe it was possible to pass a certification test after studying for only 2 weeks.
I mean it was nothing too hard, just a display of memorizing, which I've grown to embrace after years of Visual Basic hacks to work with modern interfaces.
I probably won't be using 90% of what I've answered in that test
I must admit sometimes it was fun. Like teleporting a hacked combo-box into a grid and rebinding it to different data rows to make it look like we had an interactive table.
But today was more along the lines of "Select the correct option for the shared public repository default path: <80-character-long-path>\<option>" 1. rcrepo 2. pubrepo 3. shared 4. public
@Neil I mean it was a fun thing to do, to rebind controls on the fly and making them blend with the other stuff. Far from maintenance of broken spaguetti code.
@Developer00 That's not how Android works. The permissions in the manifest just tell the OS which permission REQUESTS are allowed. You still need to ask the user to access the camera.
Otherwise every app that you ever installed that has a declaration can access your camera whenever.
> But don't be alarmed, alright? Although, if you do feel alarm, try to hold onto that feeling because that is the proper reaction to being told you have brain damage.