ASP .NET Core Bootstrap toast
The article discusses implementing Bootstrap toasts in an ASP.NET Core application to create flexible, lightweight notifications. Configuration options for the toasts are defined in appsettings.json and injected into the application using dependency injection. The author demonstrates how to structure the code and settings to support multiple toast types, such as error messages.
- ▪Bootstrap toasts are used to display lightweight notifications in ASP.NET Core applications.
- ▪Toast configurations, such as message, title, and delay, can be defined in appsettings.json.
- ▪The ToastOptions class is used to parse JSON settings, and dependency injection is used to access them in the application.
- ▪The example includes a specific toast configuration for a database error with a 10-second delay.
- ▪Source code and implementation details are provided to help developers integrate Bootstrap toasts into their projects.
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try { if(localStorage) { let currentUser = localStorage.getItem('current_user'); if (currentUser) { currentUser = JSON.parse(currentUser); if (currentUser.id === 1000004) { document.getElementById('article-show-container').classList.add('current-user-is-article-author'); } } } } catch (e) { console.error(e); } Karen Payne Posted on May 16 ASP .NET Core Bootstrap toast #aspnet #bootstrap #csharp #dotnetcore C# (71 Part Series) 1 SQL-Server: Exploration of datetime2(7) precision (C#) 2 Reveal Data provider parameter values at run time ... 67 more parts...
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Excerpt limited to ~120 words for fair-use compliance. The full article is at DEV.to (Top).