| [![NuGet Package](https://img.shields.io/nuget/v/Ooui.svg)](https://www.nuget.org/packages/Ooui) | [Ooui](https://www.nuget.org/packages/Ooui) | Core library with HTML elements and a server |
| [![NuGet Package](https://img.shields.io/nuget/v/Ooui.AspNetCore.svg)](https://www.nuget.org/packages/Ooui.AspNetCore) | [Ooui.AspNetCore](https://www.nuget.org/packages/Ooui.AspNetCore) | Integration with ASP.NET Core |
It presents a classic object-oriented UI API that controls a dumb browser. With Ooui, you get the full power of your favorite .NET programming language *plus* the ability to interact with your app using any device.
*(There is currently an issue with Xamarin.Forms and building from the dotnet cli, so for now we use the msbuild command and then set the --no-build flag on dotnet run but this will eventually change when the issue is resolved.)*
This will open the default starting page for the Samples. Now point your browser at [http://localhost:8080/shared-button](http://localhost:8080/shared-button)
Ooui has been broken up into several packages to increase the variety of ways that it can be used. Here are some combinations to help you decide which way is best for you.
When the user requests a page, the page will connect to the server using a web socket. This socket is used to keep the server's in-memory model of the UI (the one you work with as a programmer) in sync with the actual UI shown to the user in their browser. This is done using a simple messaging protocol with JSON packets.
Ooui is open source and I love merging PRs. Please fork away, and please obey the .editorconfig file. :-) Try to file issues for things that you want to work on *before* you start the work so that there's no duplicated effort. If you just want to help out, check out the issues and dive in!