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Mobile Development with .NET

You're reading from   Mobile Development with .NET Build cross-platform mobile applications with Xamarin.Forms 5 and ASP.NET Core 5

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800204690
Length 572 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Can Bilgin Can Bilgin
Author Profile Icon Can Bilgin
Can Bilgin
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Table of Contents (25) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Understanding .NET
2. Chapter 1: Getting Started with .NET 5.0 FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Defining Xamarin, Mono, and .NET Standard 4. Chapter 3: Developing with Universal Windows Platform 5. Section 2: Xamarin and Xamarin.Forms
6. Chapter 4: Developing Mobile Applications with Xamarin 7. Chapter 5: UI Development with Xamarin 8. Chapter 6: Customizing Xamarin.Forms 9. Section 3: Azure Cloud Services
10. Chapter 7: Azure Services for Mobile Applications 11. Chapter 8: Creating a Datastore with Cosmos DB 12. Chapter 9: Creating Microservices Azure App Services 13. Chapter 10: Using .NET Core for Azure Serverless 14. Section 4: Advanced Mobile Development
15. Chapter 11: Fluid Applications with Asynchronous Patterns 16. Chapter 12: Managing Application Data 17. Chapter 13: Engaging Users with Notifications and the Graph API 18. Section 5: Application Life Cycle Management
19. Chapter 14: Azure DevOps and Visual Studio App Center 20. Chapter 15: Application Telemetry with Application Insights 21. Chapter 16: Automated Testing 22. Chapter 17: Deploying Azure Modules 23. Chapter 18: CI/CD with Azure DevOps 24. Other Books You May Enjoy

Data access models

Probably the most important option to select before creating the Cosmos DB instance is the access model (that is, the API). In our application, we will be using the SQL API since it is inherently the only native access model and allows the usage of additional features such as triggers. This is why the SQL API will be the first access model that we will dive into in this section. Nevertheless, we will also go over the Mongo API, which can provide a viable alternative with its strong community support as well as the mitigated risk of vendor-lock. Other options that will be discussed in this section include Gremlin, Cassandra, and Azure Table Storage.

The SQL API

Previously a standalone offer known as Azure Document DB, the SQL API allows developers to query a JSON-based NoSQL data structure with a SQL dialect. Similar to actual SQL implementations, the SQL API supports the use of stored procedures, triggers (that is, change feeds), and user-defined functions...

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