ASP.NET Core Blazor event handling

Note

This isn't the latest version of this article. For the current release, see the .NET 8 version of this article.

Warning

This version of ASP.NET Core is no longer supported. For more information, see .NET and .NET Core Support Policy. For the current release, see the .NET 8 version of this article.

Important

This information relates to a pre-release product that may be substantially modified before it's commercially released. Microsoft makes no warranties, express or implied, with respect to the information provided here.

For the current release, see the .NET 8 version of this article.

This article explains Blazor's event handling features, including event argument types, event callbacks, and managing default browser events.

Delegate event handlers

Specify delegate event handlers in Razor component markup with @on{DOM EVENT}="{DELEGATE}" Razor syntax:

  • The {DOM EVENT} placeholder is a DOM event (for example, click).
  • The {DELEGATE} placeholder is the C# delegate event handler.

For event handling:

  • Delegate event handlers in Blazor Web Apps are only called in components that adopt an interactive render mode. The examples throughout this article assume that the app adopts an interactive render mode globally in the app's root component, typically the App component. For more information, see ASP.NET Core Blazor render modes.
  • Asynchronous delegate event handlers that return a Task are supported.
  • Delegate event handlers automatically trigger a UI render, so there's no need to manually call StateHasChanged.
  • Exceptions are logged.
  • Asynchronous delegate event handlers that return a Task are supported.
  • Delegate event handlers automatically trigger a UI render, so there's no need to manually call StateHasChanged.
  • Exceptions are logged.

The following code:

  • Calls the UpdateHeading method when the button is selected in the UI.
  • Calls the CheckChanged method when the checkbox is changed in the UI.

EventHandler1.razor:

@page "/event-handler-1"

<PageTitle>Event Handler 1</PageTitle>

<h1>Event Handler Example 1</h1>

<h2>@headingValue</h2>

<p>
    <button @onclick="UpdateHeading">
        Update heading
    </button>
</p>

<p>
    <label>
        <input type="checkbox" @onchange="CheckChanged" />
        @checkedMessage
    </label>
</p>

@code {
    private string headingValue = "Initial heading";
    private string checkedMessage = "Not changed yet";

    private void UpdateHeading() => headingValue = $"New heading ({DateTime.Now})";

    private void CheckChanged() => checkedMessage = $"Last change {DateTime.Now}";
}

EventHandlerExample1.razor:

@page "/event-handler-1"

<h1>@headingValue</h1>

<p>
    <button @onclick="UpdateHeading">
        Update heading
    </button>
</p>

<p>
    <label>
        <input type="checkbox" @onchange="CheckChanged" />
        @checkedMessage
    </label>
</p>

@code {
    private string headingValue = "Initial heading";
    private string checkedMessage = "Not changed yet";

    private void UpdateHeading()
    {
        headingValue = $"New heading ({DateTime.Now})";
    }

    private void CheckChanged()
    {
        checkedMessage = $"Last changed at {DateTime.Now}";
    }
}

EventHandlerExample1.razor:

@page "/event-handler-1"

<h1>@headingValue</h1>

<p>
    <button @onclick="UpdateHeading">
        Update heading
    </button>
</p>

<p>
    <label>
        <input type="checkbox" @onchange="CheckChanged" />
        @checkedMessage
    </label>
</p>

@code {
    private string headingValue = "Initial heading";
    private string checkedMessage = "Not changed yet";

    private void UpdateHeading()
    {
        headingValue = $"New heading ({DateTime.Now})";
    }

    private void CheckChanged()
    {
        checkedMessage = $"Last changed at {DateTime.Now}";
    }
}

EventHandlerExample1.razor:

@page "/event-handler-1"

<h1>@headingValue</h1>

<p>
    <button @onclick="UpdateHeading">
        Update heading
    </button>
</p>

<p>
    <label>
        <input type="checkbox" @onchange="CheckChanged" />
        @checkedMessage
    </label>
</p>

@code {
    private string headingValue = "Initial heading";
    private string checkedMessage = "Not changed yet";

    private void UpdateHeading()
    {
        headingValue = $"New heading ({DateTime.Now})";
    }

    private void CheckChanged()
    {
        checkedMessage = $"Last changed at {DateTime.Now}";
    }
}

EventHandlerExample1.razor:

@page "/event-handler-1"

<h1>@headingValue</h1>

<p>
    <button @onclick="UpdateHeading">
        Update heading
    </button>
</p>

<p>
    <label>
        <input type="checkbox" @onchange="CheckChanged" />
        @checkedMessage
    </label>
</p>

@code {
    private string headingValue = "Initial heading";
    private string checkedMessage = "Not changed yet";

    private void UpdateHeading()
    {
        headingValue = $"New heading ({DateTime.Now})";
    }

    private void CheckChanged()
    {
        checkedMessage = $"Last changed at {DateTime.Now}";
    }
}

In the following example, UpdateHeading:

  • Is called asynchronously when the button is selected.
  • Waits two seconds before updating the heading.

EventHandler2.razor:

@page "/event-handler-2"

<PageTitle>Event Handler 2</PageTitle>

<h1>Event Handler Example 2</h1>

<h2>@headingValue</h2>

<p>
    <button @onclick="UpdateHeading">
        Update heading
    </button>
</p>

@code {
    private string headingValue = "Initial heading";

    private async Task UpdateHeading()
    {
        await Task.Delay(2000);

        headingValue = $"New heading ({DateTime.Now})";
    }
}

EventHandlerExample2.razor:

@page "/event-handler-2"

<h1>@headingValue</h1>

<p>
    <button @onclick="UpdateHeading">
        Update heading
    </button>
</p>

@code {
    private string headingValue = "Initial heading";

    private async Task UpdateHeading()
    {
        await Task.Delay(2000);

        headingValue = $"New heading ({DateTime.Now})";
    }
}

EventHandlerExample2.razor:

@page "/event-handler-2"

<h1>@headingValue</h1>

<p>
    <button @onclick="UpdateHeading">
        Update heading
    </button>
</p>

@code {
    private string headingValue = "Initial heading";

    private async Task UpdateHeading()
    {
        await Task.Delay(2000);

        headingValue = $"New heading ({DateTime.Now})";
    }
}

EventHandlerExample2.razor:

@page "/event-handler-2"

<h1>@headingValue</h1>

<p>
    <button @onclick="UpdateHeading">
        Update heading
    </button>
</p>

@code {
    private string headingValue = "Initial heading";

    private async Task UpdateHeading()
    {
        await Task.Delay(2000);

        headingValue = $"New heading ({DateTime.Now})";
    }
}

EventHandlerExample2.razor:

@page "/event-handler-2"

<h1>@headingValue</h1>

<p>
    <button @onclick="UpdateHeading">
        Update heading
    </button>
</p>

@code {
    private string headingValue = "Initial heading";

    private async Task UpdateHeading()
    {
        await Task.Delay(2000);

        headingValue = $"New heading ({DateTime.Now})";
    }
}

Built-in event arguments

For events that support an event argument type, specifying an event parameter in the event method definition is only necessary if the event type is used in the method. In the following example, MouseEventArgs is used in the ReportPointerLocation method to set message text that reports the mouse coordinates when the user selects a button in the UI.

EventHandler3.razor:

@page "/event-handler-3"

<PageTitle>Event Handler 3</PageTitle>

<h1>Event Handler Example 3</h1>

@for (var i = 0; i < 4; i++)
{
    <p>
        <button @onclick="ReportPointerLocation">
            Where's my mouse pointer for this button?
        </button>
    </p>
}

<p>@mousePointerMessage</p>

@code {
    private string? mousePointerMessage;

    private void ReportPointerLocation(MouseEventArgs e) => 
        mousePointerMessage = $"Mouse coordinates: {e.ScreenX}:{e.ScreenY}";
}

EventHandlerExample3.razor:

@page "/event-handler-example-3"

@for (var i = 0; i < 4; i++)
{
    <p>
        <button @onclick="ReportPointerLocation">
            Where's my mouse pointer for this button?
        </button>
    </p>
}

<p>@mousePointerMessage</p>

@code {
    private string? mousePointerMessage;

    private void ReportPointerLocation(MouseEventArgs e)
    {
        mousePointerMessage = $"Mouse coordinates: {e.ScreenX}:{e.ScreenY}";
    }
}

EventHandlerExample3.razor:

@page "/event-handler-example-3"

@for (var i = 0; i < 4; i++)
{
    <p>
        <button @onclick="ReportPointerLocation">
            Where's my mouse pointer for this button?
        </button>
    </p>
}

<p>@mousePointerMessage</p>

@code {
    private string? mousePointerMessage;

    private void ReportPointerLocation(MouseEventArgs e)
    {
        mousePointerMessage = $"Mouse coordinates: {e.ScreenX}:{e.ScreenY}";
    }
}

EventHandlerExample3.razor:

@page "/event-handler-example-3"

@for (var i = 0; i < 4; i++)
{
    <p>
        <button @onclick="ReportPointerLocation">
            Where's my mouse pointer for this button?
        </button>
    </p>
}

<p>@mousePointerMessage</p>

@code {
    private string mousePointerMessage;

    private void ReportPointerLocation(MouseEventArgs e)
    {
        mousePointerMessage = $"Mouse coordinates: {e.ScreenX}:{e.ScreenY}";
    }
}

EventHandlerExample3.razor:

@page "/event-handler-example-3"

@for (var i = 0; i < 4; i++)
{
    <p>
        <button @onclick="ReportPointerLocation">
            Where's my mouse pointer for this button?
        </button>
    </p>
}

<p>@mousePointerMessage</p>

@code {
    private string mousePointerMessage;

    private void ReportPointerLocation(MouseEventArgs e)
    {
        mousePointerMessage = $"Mouse coordinates: {e.ScreenX}:{e.ScreenY}";
    }
}

Supported EventArgs are shown in the following table.

Event Class DOM notes
Clipboard ClipboardEventArgs
Drag DragEventArgs DataTransfer and DataTransferItem hold dragged item data.

Implement drag and drop in Blazor apps using JS interop with HTML Drag and Drop API.
Error ErrorEventArgs
Event EventArgs EventHandlers holds attributes to configure the mappings between event names and event argument types.
Focus FocusEventArgs Doesn't include support for relatedTarget.
Input ChangeEventArgs
Keyboard KeyboardEventArgs
Mouse MouseEventArgs
Mouse pointer PointerEventArgs
Mouse wheel WheelEventArgs
Progress ProgressEventArgs
Touch TouchEventArgs TouchPoint represents a single contact point on a touch-sensitive device.

For more information, see the following resources:

Custom event arguments

Blazor supports custom event arguments, which enable you to pass arbitrary data to .NET event handlers with custom events.

General configuration

Custom events with custom event arguments are generally enabled with the following steps.

In JavaScript, define a function for building the custom event argument object from the source event:

function eventArgsCreator(event) { 
  return {
    customProperty1: 'any value for property 1',
    customProperty2: event.srcElement.id
  };
}

The event parameter is a DOM Event (MDN documentation).

Register the custom event with the preceding handler in a JavaScript initializer. Provide the appropriate browser event name to browserEventName, which for the example shown in this section is click for a button selection in the UI.

wwwroot/{PACKAGE ID/ASSEMBLY NAME}.lib.module.js (the {PACKAGE ID/ASSEMBLY NAME} placeholder is the package ID or assembly name of the app):

For a Blazor Web App:

export function afterWebStarted(blazor) {
  blazor.registerCustomEventType('customevent', {
    browserEventName: 'click',
    createEventArgs: eventArgsCreator
  });
}

For a Blazor Server or Blazor WebAssembly app:

export function afterStarted(blazor) {
  blazor.registerCustomEventType('customevent', {
    browserEventName: 'click',
    createEventArgs: eventArgsCreator
  });
}

The call to registerCustomEventType is performed in a script only once per event.

For the call to registerCustomEventType, use the blazor parameter (lowercase b) provided by the Blazor start event. Although the registration is valid when using the Blazor object (uppercase B), the preferred approach is to use the parameter.

The custom event name, customevent in the preceding example, must not match a reserved Blazor event name. The reserved names can be found in the Blazor framework reference source (see the calls to the registerBuiltInEventType function).

Note

Documentation links to .NET reference source usually load the repository's default branch, which represents the current development for the next release of .NET. To select a tag for a specific release, use the Switch branches or tags dropdown list. For more information, see How to select a version tag of ASP.NET Core source code (dotnet/AspNetCore.Docs #26205).

Define a class for the event arguments:

namespace BlazorSample.CustomEvents;

public class CustomEventArgs : EventArgs
{
    public string? CustomProperty1 {get; set;}
    public string? CustomProperty2 {get; set;}
}

Wire up the custom event with the event arguments by adding an [EventHandler] attribute annotation for the custom event:

  • In order for the compiler to find the [EventHandler] class, it must be placed into a C# class file (.cs), making it a normal top-level class.
  • Mark the class public.
  • The class doesn't require members.
  • The class must be called "EventHandlers" in order to be found by the Razor compiler.
  • Place the class under a namespace specific to your app.
  • Import the namespace into the Razor component (.razor) where the event is used.
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Components;

namespace BlazorSample.CustomEvents;

[EventHandler("oncustomevent", typeof(CustomEventArgs),
    enableStopPropagation: true, enablePreventDefault: true)]
public static class EventHandlers
{
}

Register the event handler on one or more HTML elements. Access the data that was passed in from JavaScript in the delegate handler method:

@using BlazorSample.CustomEvents

<button id="buttonId" @oncustomevent="HandleCustomEvent">Handle</button>

@if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(propVal1) && !string.IsNullOrEmpty(propVal2))
{
    <ul>
        <li>propVal1: @propVal1</li>
        <li>propVal2: @propVal2</li>
    </ul>
}

@code
{
    private string? propVal1;
    private string? propVal2;

    private void HandleCustomEvent(CustomEventArgs eventArgs)
    {
        propVal1 = eventArgs.CustomProperty1;
        propVal2 = eventArgs.CustomProperty2;
    }
}

If the @oncustomevent attribute isn't recognized by IntelliSense, make sure that the component or the _Imports.razor file contains an @using statement for the namespace containing the EventHandler class.

Whenever the custom event is fired on the DOM, the event handler is called with the data passed from the JavaScript.

If you're attempting to fire a custom event, bubbles must be enabled by setting its value to true. Otherwise, the event doesn't reach the Blazor handler for processing into the C# custom [EventHandler] attribute class. For more information, see MDN Web Docs: Event bubbling.

Custom clipboard paste event example

The following example receives a custom clipboard paste event that includes the time of the paste and the user's pasted text.

Declare a custom name (oncustompaste) for the event and a .NET class (CustomPasteEventArgs) to hold the event arguments for this event:

CustomEvents.cs:

using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Components;

namespace BlazorSample.CustomEvents;

[EventHandler("oncustompaste", typeof(CustomPasteEventArgs), 
    enableStopPropagation: true, enablePreventDefault: true)]
public static class EventHandlers
{
}

public class CustomPasteEventArgs : EventArgs
{
    public DateTime EventTimestamp { get; set; }
    public string? PastedData { get; set; }
}

Add JavaScript code to supply data for the EventArgs subclass with the preceding handler in a JavaScript initializer. The following example only handles pasting text, but you could use arbitrary JavaScript APIs to deal with users pasting other types of data, such as images.

wwwroot/{PACKAGE ID/ASSEMBLY NAME}.lib.module.js:

For a Blazor Web App:

export function afterWebStarted(blazor) {
  blazor.registerCustomEventType('custompaste', {
    browserEventName: 'paste',
    createEventArgs: event => {
      return {
        eventTimestamp: new Date(),
        pastedData: event.clipboardData.getData('text')
      };
    }
  });
}

For a Blazor Server or Blazor WebAssembly app:

export function afterStarted(blazor) {
  blazor.registerCustomEventType('custompaste', {
    browserEventName: 'paste',
    createEventArgs: event => {
      return {
        eventTimestamp: new Date(),
        pastedData: event.clipboardData.getData('text')
      };
    }
  });
}

In the preceding example, the {PACKAGE ID/ASSEMBLY NAME} placeholder of the file name represents the package ID or assembly name of the app.

Note

For the call to registerCustomEventType, use the blazor parameter (lowercase b) provided by the Blazor start event. Although the registration is valid when using the Blazor object (uppercase B), the preferred approach is to use the parameter.

The preceding code tells the browser that when a native paste event occurs:

  • Raise a custompaste event.
  • Supply the event arguments data using the custom logic stated:

Event name conventions differ between .NET and JavaScript:

  • In .NET, event names are prefixed with "on".
  • In JavaScript, event names don't have a prefix.

In a Razor component, attach the custom handler to an element.

CustomPasteArguments.razor:

@page "/custom-paste-arguments"
@using BlazorSample.CustomEvents

<label>
    Try pasting into the following text box:
    <input @oncustompaste="HandleCustomPaste" />
</label>

<p>
    @message
</p>

@code {
    private string? message;

    private void HandleCustomPaste(CustomPasteEventArgs eventArgs)
    {
        message = $"At {eventArgs.EventTimestamp.ToShortTimeString()}, " +
            $"you pasted: {eventArgs.PastedData}";
    }
}

Lambda expressions

Lambda expressions are supported as the delegate event handler.

EventHandler4.razor:

@page "/event-handler-4"

<PageTitle>Event Handler 4</PageTitle>

<h1>Event Handler Example 4</h1>

<h2>@heading</h2>

<p>
    <button @onclick="@(e => heading = "New heading!!!")">
        Update heading
    </button>
</p>

@code {
    private string heading = "Initial heading";
}

EventHandlerExample4.razor:

@page "/event-handler-example-4"

<h1>@heading</h1>

<p>
    <button @onclick="@(e => heading = "New heading!!!")">
        Update heading
    </button>
</p>

@code {
    private string heading = "Initial heading";
}

EventHandlerExample4.razor:

@page "/event-handler-example-4"

<h1>@heading</h1>

<p>
    <button @onclick="@(e => heading = "New heading!!!")">
        Update heading
    </button>
</p>

@code {
    private string heading = "Initial heading";
}

EventHandlerExample4.razor:

@page "/event-handler-example-4"

<h1>@heading</h1>

<p>
    <button @onclick="@(e => heading = "New heading!!!")">
        Update heading
    </button>
</p>

@code {
    private string heading = "Initial heading";
}

EventHandlerExample4.razor:

@page "/event-handler-example-4"

<h1>@heading</h1>

<p>
    <button @onclick="@(e => heading = "New heading!!!")">
        Update heading
    </button>
</p>

@code {
    private string heading = "Initial heading";
}

It's often convenient to close over additional values using C# method parameters, such as when iterating over a set of elements. The following example creates three buttons, each of which calls UpdateHeading and passes the following data:

  • An event argument (MouseEventArgs) in e.
  • The button number in buttonNumber.

EventHandler5.razor:

@page "/event-handler-5"

<PageTitle>Event Handler 5</PageTitle>

<h1>Event Handler Example 5</h1>

<h2>@heading</h2>

@for (var i = 1; i < 4; i++)
{
    var buttonNumber = i;

    <p>
        <button @onclick="@(e => UpdateHeading(e, buttonNumber))">
            Button #@i
        </button>
    </p>
}

@code {
    private string heading = "Select a button to learn its position";

    private void UpdateHeading(MouseEventArgs e, int buttonNumber) => 
        heading = $"Selected #{buttonNumber} at {e.ClientX}:{e.ClientY}";
}

EventHandlerExample5.razor:

@page "/event-handler-example-5"

<h1>@heading</h1>

@for (var i = 1; i < 4; i++)
{
    var buttonNumber = i;

    <p>
        <button @onclick="@(e => UpdateHeading(e, buttonNumber))">
            Button #@i
        </button>
    </p>
}

@code {
    private string heading = "Select a button to learn its position";

    private void UpdateHeading(MouseEventArgs e, int buttonNumber)
    {
        heading = $"Selected #{buttonNumber} at {e.ClientX}:{e.ClientY}";
    }
}

EventHandlerExample5.razor:

@page "/event-handler-example-5"

<h1>@heading</h1>

@for (var i = 1; i < 4; i++)
{
    var buttonNumber = i;

    <p>
        <button @onclick="@(e => UpdateHeading(e, buttonNumber))">
            Button #@i
        </button>
    </p>
}

@code {
    private string heading = "Select a button to learn its position";

    private void UpdateHeading(MouseEventArgs e, int buttonNumber)
    {
        heading = $"Selected #{buttonNumber} at {e.ClientX}:{e.ClientY}";
    }
}

EventHandlerExample5.razor:

@page "/event-handler-example-5"

<h1>@heading</h1>

@for (var i = 1; i < 4; i++)
{
    var buttonNumber = i;

    <p>
        <button @onclick="@(e => UpdateHeading(e, buttonNumber))">
            Button #@i
        </button>
    </p>
}

@code {
    private string heading = "Select a button to learn its position";

    private void UpdateHeading(MouseEventArgs e, int buttonNumber)
    {
        heading = $"Selected #{buttonNumber} at {e.ClientX}:{e.ClientY}";
    }
}

EventHandlerExample5.razor:

@page "/event-handler-example-5"

<h1>@heading</h1>

@for (var i = 1; i < 4; i++)
{
    var buttonNumber = i;

    <p>
        <button @onclick="@(e => UpdateHeading(e, buttonNumber))">
            Button #@i
        </button>
    </p>
}

@code {
    private string heading = "Select a button to learn its position";

    private void UpdateHeading(MouseEventArgs e, int buttonNumber)
    {
        heading = $"Selected #{buttonNumber} at {e.ClientX}:{e.ClientY}";
    }
}

Creating a large number of event delegates in a loop may cause poor rendering performance. For more information, see ASP.NET Core Blazor performance best practices.

Avoid using a loop variable directly in a lambda expression, such as i in the preceding for loop example. Otherwise, the same variable is used by all lambda expressions, which results in use of the same value in all lambdas. Capture the variable's value in a local variable. In the preceding example:

  • The loop variable i is assigned to buttonNumber.
  • buttonNumber is used in the lambda expression.

Alternatively, use a foreach loop with Enumerable.Range, which doesn't suffer from the preceding problem:

@foreach (var buttonNumber in Enumerable.Range(1, 3))
{
    <p>
        <button @onclick="@(e => UpdateHeading(e, buttonNumber))">
            Button #@buttonNumber
        </button>
    </p>
}

EventCallback

A common scenario with nested components is executing a method in a parent component when a child component event occurs. An onclick event occurring in the child component is a common use case. To expose events across components, use an EventCallback. A parent component can assign a callback method to a child component's EventCallback.

The following Child component demonstrates how a button's onclick handler is set up to receive an EventCallback delegate from the sample's ParentComponent. The EventCallback is typed with MouseEventArgs, which is appropriate for an onclick event from a peripheral device.

Child.razor:

<p>
    <button @onclick="OnClickCallback">
        Trigger a Parent component method
    </button>
</p>

@code {
    [Parameter]
    public string? Title { get; set; }

    [Parameter]
    public RenderFragment? ChildContent { get; set; }

    [Parameter]
    public EventCallback<MouseEventArgs> OnClickCallback { get; set; }
}
<p>
    <button @onclick="OnClickCallback">
        Trigger a Parent component method
    </button>
</p>

@code {
    [Parameter]
    public string? Title { get; set; }

    [Parameter]
    public RenderFragment? ChildContent { get; set; }

    [Parameter]
    public EventCallback<MouseEventArgs> OnClickCallback { get; set; }
}
<p>
    <button @onclick="OnClickCallback">
        Trigger a Parent component method
    </button>
</p>

@code {
    [Parameter]
    public string? Title { get; set; }

    [Parameter]
    public RenderFragment? ChildContent { get; set; }

    [Parameter]
    public EventCallback<MouseEventArgs> OnClickCallback { get; set; }
}
<p>
    <button @onclick="OnClickCallback">
        Trigger a Parent component method
    </button>
</p>

@code {
    [Parameter]
    public string Title { get; set; }

    [Parameter]
    public RenderFragment ChildContent { get; set; }

    [Parameter]
    public EventCallback<MouseEventArgs> OnClickCallback { get; set; }
}
<p>
    <button @onclick="OnClickCallback">
        Trigger a Parent component method
    </button>
</p>

@code {
    [Parameter]
    public string Title { get; set; }

    [Parameter]
    public RenderFragment ChildContent { get; set; }

    [Parameter]
    public EventCallback<MouseEventArgs> OnClickCallback { get; set; }
}

The Parent component sets the child's EventCallback<TValue> (OnClickCallback) to its ShowMessage method.

ParentChild.razor:

@page "/parent-child"

<PageTitle>Parent Child</PageTitle>

<h1>Parent Child Example</h1>

<Child Title="Panel Title from Parent" OnClickCallback="ShowMessage">
    Content of the child component is supplied by the parent component.
</Child>

<p>@message</p>

@code {
    private string? message;

    private void ShowMessage(MouseEventArgs e) => 
        message = $"Blaze a new trail with Blazor! ({e.ScreenX}:{e.ScreenY})";
}

Parent.razor:

@page "/parent"

<h1>Parent-child example</h1>

<Child Title="Panel Title from Parent" OnClickCallback="ShowMessage">
    Content of the child component is supplied by the parent component.
</Child>

<p>@message</p>

@code {
    private string? message;

    private void ShowMessage(MouseEventArgs e)
    {
        message = $"Blaze a new trail with Blazor! ({e.ScreenX}:{e.ScreenY})";
    }
}

Parent.razor:

@page "/parent"

<h1>Parent-child example</h1>

<Child Title="Panel Title from Parent" OnClickCallback="ShowMessage">
    Content of the child component is supplied by the parent component.
</Child>

<p>@message</p>

@code {
    private string? message;

    private void ShowMessage(MouseEventArgs e)
    {
        message = $"Blaze a new trail with Blazor! ({e.ScreenX}:{e.ScreenY})";
    }
}

Parent.razor:

@page "/parent"

<h1>Parent-child example</h1>

<Child Title="Panel Title from Parent" OnClickCallback="ShowMessage">
    Content of the child component is supplied by the parent component.
</Child>

<p>@message</p>

@code {
    private string message;

    private void ShowMessage(MouseEventArgs e)
    {
        message = $"Blaze a new trail with Blazor! ({e.ScreenX}:{e.ScreenY})";
    }
}

Parent.razor:

@page "/parent"

<h1>Parent-child example</h1>

<Child Title="Panel Title from Parent" OnClickCallback="ShowMessage">
    Content of the child component is supplied by the parent component.
</Child>

<p>@message</p>

@code {
    private string message;

    private void ShowMessage(MouseEventArgs e)
    {
        message = $"Blaze a new trail with Blazor! ({e.ScreenX}:{e.ScreenY})";
    }
}

When the button is selected in the ChildComponent:

  • The Parent component's ShowMessage method is called. message is updated and displayed in the Parent component.
  • A call to StateHasChanged isn't required in the callback's method (ShowMessage). StateHasChanged is called automatically to rerender the Parent component, just as child events trigger component rerendering in event handlers that execute within the child. For more information, see ASP.NET Core Razor component rendering.

Use EventCallback and EventCallback<TValue> for event handling and binding component parameters.

Prefer the strongly typed EventCallback<TValue> over EventCallback. EventCallback<TValue> provides enhanced error feedback when an inappropriate type is used, guiding users of the component towards correct implementation. Similar to other UI event handlers, specifying the event parameter is optional. Use EventCallback when there's no value passed to the callback.

EventCallback and EventCallback<TValue> permit asynchronous delegates. EventCallback is weakly typed and allows passing any type argument in InvokeAsync(Object). EventCallback<TValue> is strongly typed and requires passing a T argument in InvokeAsync(T) that's assignable to TValue.

Invoke an EventCallback or EventCallback<TValue> with InvokeAsync and await the Task:

await OnClickCallback.InvokeAsync({ARGUMENT});

In the preceding example, the {ARGUMENT} placeholder is an optional argument.

The following parent-child example demonstrates the technique.

Child2.razor:

<h3>Child2 Component</h3>

<button @onclick="TriggerEvent">Click Me</button>

@code {
    [Parameter]
    public EventCallback<string> OnClickCallback { get; set; }

    private async Task TriggerEvent()
    {
        await OnClickCallback.InvokeAsync("Blaze It!");
    }
}

ParentChild2.razor:

@page "/parent-child-2"

<PageTitle>Parent Child 2</PageTitle>

<h1>Parent Child 2 Example</h1>

<div>
    <Child2 OnClickCallback="(value) => { message1 = value; }" />
    @message1
</div>

<div>
    <Child2 OnClickCallback=
        "async (value) => { await Task.Delay(2000); message2 = value; }" /> 
    @message2
</div>

@code {
    private string message1 = string.Empty;
    private string message2 = string.Empty;
}

The second occurrence of the Child2 component demonstrates an asynchronous callback, and the new message2 value is assigned and rendered with a delay of two seconds.

Prevent default actions

Use the @on{DOM EVENT}:preventDefault directive attribute to prevent the default action for an event, where the {DOM EVENT} placeholder is a DOM event.

When a key is selected on an input device and the element focus is on a text box, a browser normally displays the key's character in the text box. In the following example, the default behavior is prevented by specifying the @onkeydown:preventDefault directive attribute. When the focus is on the <input> element, the counter increments with the key sequence Shift++. The + character isn't assigned to the <input> element's value. For more information on keydown, see MDN Web Docs: Document: keydown event.

EventHandler6.razor:

@page "/event-handler-6"

<PageTitle>Event Handler 6</PageTitle>

<h1>Event Handler Example 6</h1>

<p>For this example, give the <code><input></code> focus.</p>

<p>
    <label>
        Count of '+' key presses: 
        <input value="@count" @onkeydown="KeyHandler" @onkeydown:preventDefault />
    </label>
</p>

@code {
    private int count = 0;

    private void KeyHandler(KeyboardEventArgs e)
    {
        if (e.Key == "+")
        {
            count++;
        }
    }
}

EventHandlerExample6.razor:

@page "/event-handler-example-6"

<p>
    <input value="@count" @onkeydown="KeyHandler" @onkeydown:preventDefault />
</p>

@code {
    private int count = 0;

    private void KeyHandler(KeyboardEventArgs e)
    {
        if (e.Key == "+")
        {
            count++;
        }
    }
}

EventHandlerExample6.razor:

@page "/event-handler-example-6"

<p>
    <input value="@count" @onkeydown="KeyHandler" @onkeydown:preventDefault />
</p>

@code {
    private int count = 0;

    private void KeyHandler(KeyboardEventArgs e)
    {
        if (e.Key == "+")
        {
            count++;
        }
    }
}

EventHandlerExample6.razor:

@page "/event-handler-example-6"

<p>
    <input value="@count" @onkeydown="KeyHandler" @onkeydown:preventDefault />
</p>

@code {
    private int count = 0;

    private void KeyHandler(KeyboardEventArgs e)
    {
        if (e.Key == "+")
        {
            count++;
        }
    }
}

EventHandlerExample6.razor:

@page "/event-handler-example-6"

<p>
    <input value="@count" @onkeydown="KeyHandler" @onkeydown:preventDefault />
</p>

@code {
    private int count = 0;

    private void KeyHandler(KeyboardEventArgs e)
    {
        if (e.Key == "+")
        {
            count++;
        }
    }
}

Specifying the @on{DOM EVENT}:preventDefault attribute without a value is equivalent to @on{DOM EVENT}:preventDefault="true".

An expression is also a permitted value of the attribute. In the following example, shouldPreventDefault is a bool field set to either true or false:

<input @onkeydown:preventDefault="shouldPreventDefault" />

...

@code {
    private bool shouldPreventDefault = true;
}

Stop event propagation

Use the @on{DOM EVENT}:stopPropagation directive attribute to stop event propagation within the Blazor scope. {DOM EVENT} is a placeholder for a DOM event.

The stopPropagation directive attribute's effect is limited to the Blazor scope and doesn't extend to the HTML DOM. Events must propagate to the HTML DOM root before Blazor can act upon them. For a mechanism to prevent HTML DOM event propagation, consider the following approach:

In the following example, selecting the checkbox prevents click events from the second child <div> from propagating to the parent <div>. Since propagated click events normally fire the OnSelectParentDiv method, selecting the second child <div> results in the parent <div> message appearing unless the checkbox is selected.

EventHandler7.razor:

@page "/event-handler-7"

<PageTitle>Event Handler 7</PageTitle>

<h1>Event Handler Example 7</h1>

<div>
    <b>stopPropagation</b>: @stopPropagation
</div>

<div>
    <button @onclick="StopPropagation">
        Stop Propagation (stopPropagation = true)
    </button>
    <button @onclick="EnablePropagation">
        Enable Propagation (stopPropagation = false)
    </button>
</div>

<div class="m-1 p-1 border border-primary" @onclick="OnSelectParentDiv">
    <h3>Parent div</h3>

    <div class="m-1 p-1 border" @onclick="OnSelectChildDiv">
        Child div that never stops propagation to the parent div when 
        selected.
    </div>

    <div class="m-1 p-1 border" @onclick="OnSelectChildDiv" 
            @onclick:stopPropagation="stopPropagation">
        Child div that stops propagation when selected if 
        <b>stopPropagation</b> is <b>true</b>.
    </div>
</div>

<p>
    @message
</p>

@code {
    private bool stopPropagation = false;
    private string? message;

    private void StopPropagation() => stopPropagation = true;

    private void EnablePropagation() => stopPropagation = false;

    private void OnSelectParentDiv() => 
        message = $"The parent div was selected. {DateTime.Now}";

    private void OnSelectChildDiv() => 
        message = $"The child div was selected. {DateTime.Now}";
}

EventHandlerExample7.razor:

@page "/event-handler-example-7"

<div>
    <b>stopPropagation</b>: @stopPropagation
</div>

<div>
    <button @onclick="StopPropagation">
        Stop Propagation (stopPropagation = true)
    </button>
    <button @onclick="EnablePropagation">
        Enable Propagation (stopPropagation = false)
    </button>
</div>

<div class="m-1 p-1 border border-primary" @onclick="OnSelectParentDiv">
    <h3>Parent div</h3>

    <div class="m-1 p-1 border" @onclick="OnSelectChildDiv">
        Child div that never stops propagation to the parent div when 
        selected.
    </div>

    <div class="m-1 p-1 border" @onclick="OnSelectChildDiv" 
            @onclick:stopPropagation="stopPropagation">
        Child div that stops propagation when selected if 
        <b>stopPropagation</b> is <b>true</b>.
    </div>
</div>

<p>
    @message
</p>

@code {
    private bool stopPropagation = false;
    private string? message;

    private void StopPropagation() => stopPropagation = true;

    private void EnablePropagation() => stopPropagation = false;

    private void OnSelectParentDiv() =>
        message = $"The parent div was selected. {DateTime.Now}";

    private void OnSelectChildDiv() =>
        message = $"The child div was selected. {DateTime.Now}";
}

EventHandlerExample7.razor:

@page "/event-handler-example-7"

<div>
    <b>stopPropagation</b>: @stopPropagation
</div>

<div>
    <button @onclick="StopPropagation">
        Stop Propagation (stopPropagation = true)
    </button>
    <button @onclick="EnablePropagation">
        Enable Propagation (stopPropagation = false)
    </button>
</div>

<div class="m-1 p-1 border border-primary" @onclick="OnSelectParentDiv">
    <h3>Parent div</h3>

    <div class="m-1 p-1 border" @onclick="OnSelectChildDiv">
        Child div that never stops propagation to the parent div when 
        selected.
    </div>

    <div class="m-1 p-1 border" @onclick="OnSelectChildDiv" 
            @onclick:stopPropagation="stopPropagation">
        Child div that stops propagation when selected if 
        <b>stopPropagation</b> is <b>true</b>.
    </div>
</div>

<p>
    @message
</p>

@code {
    private bool stopPropagation = false;
    private string? message;

    private void StopPropagation() => stopPropagation = true;

    private void EnablePropagation() => stopPropagation = false;

    private void OnSelectParentDiv() =>
        message = $"The parent div was selected. {DateTime.Now}";

    private void OnSelectChildDiv() =>
        message = $"The child div was selected. {DateTime.Now}";
}

EventHandlerExample7.razor:

@page "/event-handler-example-7"

<div>
    <b>stopPropagation</b>: @stopPropagation
</div>

<div>
    <button @onclick="StopPropagation">
        Stop Propagation (stopPropagation = true)
    </button>
    <button @onclick="EnablePropagation">
        Enable Propagation (stopPropagation = false)
    </button>
</div>

<div class="m-1 p-1 border border-primary" @onclick="OnSelectParentDiv">
    <h3>Parent div</h3>

    <div class="m-1 p-1 border" @onclick="OnSelectChildDiv">
        Child div that never stops propagation to the parent div when 
        selected.
    </div>

    <div class="m-1 p-1 border" @onclick="OnSelectChildDiv" 
            @onclick:stopPropagation="stopPropagation">
        Child div that stops propagation when selected if 
        <b>stopPropagation</b> is <b>true</b>.
    </div>
</div>

<p>
    @message
</p>

@code {
    private bool stopPropagation = false;
    private string message;

    private void StopPropagation() => stopPropagation = true;

    private void EnablePropagation() => stopPropagation = false;

    private void OnSelectParentDiv() =>
        message = $"The parent div was selected. {DateTime.Now}";

    private void OnSelectChildDiv() =>
        message = $"The child div was selected. {DateTime.Now}";
}

EventHandlerExample7.razor:

@page "/event-handler-example-7"

<div>
    <b>stopPropagation</b>: @stopPropagation
</div>

<div>
    <button @onclick="StopPropagation">
        Stop Propagation (stopPropagation = true)
    </button>
    <button @onclick="EnablePropagation">
        Enable Propagation (stopPropagation = false)
    </button>
</div>

<div class="m-1 p-1 border border-primary" @onclick="OnSelectParentDiv">
    <h3>Parent div</h3>

    <div class="m-1 p-1 border" @onclick="OnSelectChildDiv">
        Child div that never stops propagation to the parent div when 
        selected.
    </div>

    <div class="m-1 p-1 border" @onclick="OnSelectChildDiv" 
            @onclick:stopPropagation="stopPropagation">
        Child div that stops propagation when selected if 
        <b>stopPropagation</b> is <b>true</b>.
    </div>
</div>

<p>
    @message
</p>

@code {
    private bool stopPropagation = false;
    private string message;

    private void StopPropagation() => stopPropagation = true;

    private void EnablePropagation() => stopPropagation = false;

    private void OnSelectParentDiv() =>
        message = $"The parent div was selected. {DateTime.Now}";

    private void OnSelectChildDiv() =>
        message = $"The child div was selected. {DateTime.Now}";
}

Focus an element

Call FocusAsync on an element reference to focus an element in code. In the following example, select the button to focus the <input> element.

EventHandler8.razor:

@page "/event-handler-8"

<PageTitle>Event Handler 8</PageTitle>

<h1>Event Handler Example 8</h1>

<p>Select the button to give the <code><input></code> focus.</p>

<p>
    <label>
        Input: 
        <input @ref="exampleInput" />
    </label>
    
</p>

<button @onclick="ChangeFocus">
    Focus the Input Element
</button>

@code {
    private ElementReference exampleInput;

    private async Task ChangeFocus()
    {
        await exampleInput.FocusAsync();
    }
}

EventHandlerExample8.razor:

@page "/event-handler-example-8"

<p>
    <input @ref="exampleInput" />
</p>

<button @onclick="ChangeFocus">
    Focus the Input Element
</button>

@code {
    private ElementReference exampleInput;

    private async Task ChangeFocus()
    {
        await exampleInput.FocusAsync();
    }
}

EventHandlerExample8.razor:

@page "/event-handler-example-8"

<p>
    <input @ref="exampleInput" />
</p>

<button @onclick="ChangeFocus">
    Focus the Input Element
</button>

@code {
    private ElementReference exampleInput;

    private async Task ChangeFocus()
    {
        await exampleInput.FocusAsync();
    }
}