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Improving your C# Skills

You're reading from   Improving your C# Skills Solve modern challenges with functional programming and test-driven techniques of C#

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Product type Course
Published in Feb 2019
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781838558383
Length 606 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (4):
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Ovais Mehboob Ahmed Khan Ovais Mehboob Ahmed Khan
Author Profile Icon Ovais Mehboob Ahmed Khan
Ovais Mehboob Ahmed Khan
Clayton Hunt Clayton Hunt
Author Profile Icon Clayton Hunt
Clayton Hunt
John Callaway John Callaway
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John Callaway
Rod Stephens Rod Stephens
Author Profile Icon Rod Stephens
Rod Stephens
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Table of Contents (26) Chapters Close

Title Page
Copyright and Credits
About Packt
Contributors
Preface
1. What's New in .NET Core 2 and C# 7? FREE CHAPTER 2. Understanding .NET Core Internals and Measuring Performance 3. Multithreading and Asynchronous Programming in .NET Core 4. Securing and Implementing Resilience in .NET Core Applications 5. Why TDD is Important 6. Setting Up the .NET Test Environment 7. Setting Up a JavaScript Environment 8. What to Know Before Getting Started 9. Tabula Rasa – Approaching an Application with TDD in Mind 10. Testing JavaScript Applications 11. Exploring Integrations 12. Changes in Requirements 13. The Legacy Problem 14. Unraveling a Mess 15. Geometry 16. Randomization 17. Files and Directories 18. Advanced C# and .NET Features 19. Cryptography 1. Other Books You May Enjoy Index

Dealing with legacy problems


We have been discussing all the issues with legacy code. Now it is time to tackle solving those issues. The first thing we must do is bring sanity to the targeted legacy code, and then we can begin testing and eventually fix the code and bring it back from death.

Safe refactoring

The term refactoring is often used incorrectly. When refactoring, you are merely changing the structure of the code. If the logic and/or signature of the code in question changes, then this does not qualify as refactoring. This is a change; most likely a breaking change.

If I'm changing the structure of the code (refactoring), then I don't ever change its behavior at the same time. If I'm changing the interface by which some logic is invoked, I never change the logic itself at the same time.

– Kent Beck

A safe refactoring is one that is guaranteed to not accidentally break the code. Other changes that aren't intended to actually change the behavior of the code but could do it accidentally...

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