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An Atypical ASP.NET Core 5 Design Patterns Guide

You're reading from   An Atypical ASP.NET Core 5 Design Patterns Guide A SOLID adventure into architectural principles, design patterns, .NET 5, and C#

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789346091
Length 762 pages
Edition 1st 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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Table of Contents (27) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Principles and Methodologies
2. Chapter 1: Introduction to .NET FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Testing Your ASP.NET Core Application 4. Chapter 3: Architectural Principles 5. Section 2: Designing for ASP.NET Core
6. Chapter 4: The MVC Pattern using Razor 7. Chapter 5: The MVC Pattern for Web APIs 8. Chapter 6: Understanding the Strategy, Abstract Factory, and Singleton Design Patterns 9. Chapter 7: Deep Dive into Dependency Injection 10. Chapter 8: Options and Logging Patterns 11. Section 3: Designing at Component Scale
12. Chapter 9: Structural Patterns 13. Chapter 10: Behavioral Patterns 14. Chapter 11: Understanding the Operation Result Design Pattern 15. Section 4: Designing at Application Scale
16. Chapter 12: Understanding Layering 17. Chapter 13: Getting Started with Object Mappers 18. Chapter 14: Mediator and CQRS Design Patterns 19. Chapter 15: Getting Started with Vertical Slice Architecture 20. Chapter 16: Introduction to Microservices Architecture 21. Section 5: Designing the Client Side
22. Chapter 17: ASP.NET Core User Interfaces 23. Chapter 18: A Brief Look into Blazor 24. Assessment Answers 25. Acronyms Lexicon
26. Other Books You May Enjoy

Chapter 16

  1. The message queue gets a message and has a single subscriber dequeue it. If nothing dequeues a message, it stays in the queue indefinitely (FIFO model). The pub-sub model gets a message and sends it to zero or more subscribers.
  2. Event sourcing is the process of chronologically accumulating events that happened in a system. It allows you to recreate the state of the application by replaying those events.
  3. Yes, you can mix Gateway patterns (or sub-patterns).
  4. No, you can deploy micro-applications (microservices) on-premises if you want to. Moreover, in Chapter 14, Mediator and CQRS Design Patterns, we saw that we could use CQRS even inside a single application.
  5. No, you can deploy microservices without containers if you want to. In any case, containers will most likely save you many headaches (and create new ones).
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