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Clean Code in C#

You're reading from   Clean Code in C# Refactor your legacy C# code base and improve application performance by applying best practices

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838982973
Length 500 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Jason Alls Jason Alls
Author Profile Icon Jason Alls
Jason Alls
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Coding Standards and Principles in C# 2. Code Review – Process and Importance FREE CHAPTER 3. Classes, Objects, and Data Structures 4. Writing Clean Functions 5. Exception Handling 6. Unit Testing 7. End-to-End System Testing 8. Threading and Concurrency 9. Designing and Developing APIs 10. Securing APIs with API Keys and Azure Key Vault 11. Addressing Cross-Cutting Concerns 12. Using Tools to Improve Code Quality 13. Refactoring C# Code – Identifying Code Smells 14. Refactoring C# Code – Implementing Design Patterns 15. Assessments 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

Summary

We've learned some valuable information. We started off by looking at the decorator pattern and then the proxy pattern. The proxy pattern provides objects that act as substitutes for real service objects used by clients. A proxy receives a client request, performs the necessary work, and then passes the request to the service object. Since proxies share the same interfaces as the services they substitute, they are interchangeable.

After covering the proxy pattern, we then moved onto AOP with PostSharp. We saw how we can use aspects and attributes together to decorate code so that at compile-time, it injects code to perform the required operations, such as exception handling, logging, auditing, and security. We extended the aspect framework by developing our own aspect and looked at how to use PostSharp and the decorator pattern to address the cross-cutting concerns of configuration management, logging, auditing, security, validation, exception handling, instrumentation...

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