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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
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Clayton Hunt
John Callaway John Callaway
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John Callaway
Rod Stephens Rod Stephens
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Rod Stephens
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Toc

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

Evolution of .NET


In early 2002, when Microsoft first introduced the .NET Framework, it targeteddevelopers who were working on classic ASP or VB 6 platforms since they didn't have any compelling framework for developing enterprise-level applications. With the release of the .NET Framework, developers had a platform to develop applications and could choose any of the languages from VB.NET, C#, and F#. Irrespective of the language chosen, the code is interoperable, and developers can create a project with VB.NET and reference it in their C# or F# project and vice versa.

The core component of .NET Framework includes Common Language Runtime (CLR), Framework Class Libraries (FCL), Base Class Libraries (BCL), and a set of application models. New features and patches have been introduced with the newer version of the .NET Framework, which comes with the new release of Windows, and developers have had to wait for a year or so to get those improvements. Every team at Microsoft worked on a different application model, and each team had to wait for the date when the new framework was released to port their fixes and improvements. Windows Forms and Web Forms were the primary application models at that time that were widely used by .NET developers.

When Web Forms was first introduced, it was a breakthrough which attracted both web developers who worked on Classic ASP and desktop application developers who worked on Visual Basic 6.0. The developer experience was appealing and provided a decent set of controls that could easily be dragged and dropped to the screen, followed to their events and properties that could be set either through the view file (.aspx) or code-behind files. Later on, Microsoft introduced the Model View Controller (MVC) application model that implemented the separation of concerns design principle, so that View, Model, and Controller are separate entities. The View is the user interface that renders the Model, where the Model represents the business entity and holds the data, and the Controller that handles the request and updates the model and injects it into the View. MVC was a breakthrough that let developers write cleaner code and bind their model with the HTML controls using model binding. With the passage of time, more features were added and the core .NET web assembly System.Web became quite big and bloated, and contained lots of packages and APIs that were not always useful in every type of application. However, with .NET, several groundbreaking changes were introduced and System.Web got split into NuGet packages that can be referenced and added individually based on requirements.

.NET Core (codename .NET vNext) was first introduced in 2014, and the following are the core benefits of using .NET Core:

Benefit

Description

Cross Platform

.NET Core can run on Windows, Linux, and macOS

Host Agnostic

.NET Core on the server side is not dependent on IIS and, with two lightweight servers, Kestrel and WebListener, it can be self-hosted as a Console application and can be also gelled with mature servers such as IIS, Apache, and others through a reverse proxy option

Modular

Ships as NuGet packages

Open Source

The entire source code is released as open source via the .NET Foundation

CLI tooling

Command line tools to create, build, and run projects from the command line

 

.NET Core is a cross-platform, open-source framework that implements .NET Standard. It provides a runtime known as .NET Core CLR, framework class libraries, which are primitive libraries known as CoreFX, and APIs that are similar to what .NET Framework has, but have a smaller footprint (lesser dependencies on other assemblies):

.NET Core provides flexible deployment options as follows:

  • Framework-Dependent Deployment (FDD): needs .NET Core SDK to be installed on the machine
  • Self-Contained Deployment (SCD): No machine-wide installation of .NET Core SDK is needed on the machine and .NET Core CLR and framework class libraries are part of the application package

Note

To install .NET Core 2.0, you can navigate to the following link https://www.microsoft.com/net/core and go through the options for installing it on Windows, Linux, MAC, and Docker.

You have been reading a chapter from
Improving your C# Skills
Published in: Feb 2019
Publisher:
ISBN-13: 9781838558383
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