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Architecting ASP.NET Core Applications

You're reading from   Architecting ASP.NET Core Applications An atypical design patterns guide for .NET 8, C# 12, and beyond

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781805123385
Length 806 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Author (1):
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Carl-Hugo Marcotte Carl-Hugo Marcotte
Author Profile Icon Carl-Hugo Marcotte
Carl-Hugo Marcotte
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Toc

Table of Contents (27) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Principles and Methodologies FREE CHAPTER
2. Introduction 3. Automated Testing 4. Architectural Principles 5. REST APIs 6. Section 2: Designing with ASP.NET Core
7. Minimal APIs 8. Model-View-Controller 9. Strategy, Abstract Factory, and Singleton Design Patterns 10. Dependency Injection 11. Application Configuration and the Options Pattern 12. Logging Patterns 13. Section 3: Component Patterns
14. Structural Patterns 15. Behavioral Patterns 16. Operation Result Pattern 17. Section 4: Application Patterns 18. Layering and Clean Architecture 19. Object Mappers 20. Mediator and CQS Patterns 21. Getting Started with Vertical Slice Architecture 22. Request-EndPoint-Response (REPR) 23. Introduction to Microservices Architecture 24. Modular Monolith 25. Other Books You May Enjoy
26. Index

Summary

In this chapter, we looked at the Mediator pattern, which allows us to cut the ties between collaborators, mediating the communication between them. Then we studied the CQS pattern, which advises the division of software behaviors into commands and queries. Those two patterns are tools that cut tight coupling between components.

Afterward, we packed the power of a CQS-inspired pipeline with the Mediator pattern into a Clean Architecture application that uses MediatR, an open source library. We broke the coupling between the request delegates and the use case handler (previously a service). A simple DTO, such as a command object, makes endpoints and controllers unaware of the handlers, leaving MediatR as the middleman between the commands and their handlers. Due to that, the handlers could change along the way without impacting the endpoint.

This concludes another chapter exploring techniques to break tight coupling and divide systems into smaller parts. All those building...

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