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Software Architecture with C# 9 and .NET 5

You're reading from   Software Architecture with C# 9 and .NET 5 Architecting software solutions using microservices, DevOps, and design patterns for Azure

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800566040
Length 700 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Authors (2):
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Gabriel Baptista Gabriel Baptista
Author Profile Icon Gabriel Baptista
Gabriel Baptista
Francesco Abbruzzese Francesco Abbruzzese
Author Profile Icon Francesco Abbruzzese
Francesco Abbruzzese
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Table of Contents (26) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Understanding the Importance of Software Architecture 2. Non-Functional Requirements FREE CHAPTER 3. Documenting Requirements with Azure DevOps 4. Deciding the Best Cloud-Based Solution 5. Applying a Microservice Architecture to Your Enterprise Application 6. Azure Service Fabric 7. Azure Kubernetes Service 8. Interacting with Data in C# – Entity Framework Core 9. How to Choose Your Data Storage in the Cloud 10. Working with Azure Functions 11. Design Patterns and .NET 5 Implementation 12. Understanding the Different Domains in Software Solutions 13. Implementing Code Reusability in C# 9 14. Applying Service-Oriented Architectures with .NET Core 15. Presenting ASP.NET Core MVC 16. Blazor WebAssembly 17. Best Practices in Coding C# 9 18. Testing Your Code with Unit Test Cases and TDD 19. Using Tools to Write Better Code 20. Understanding DevOps Principles 21. Challenges of Applying CI Scenarios 22. Automation for Functional Tests 23. Answers 24. Another Book You May Enjoy
25. Index

Blazor forms and validation

Similar to all major SPA frameworks, Blazor also offers specific tools for processing user input while providing valid feedback to the user with error messages and immediate visual clues. The whole toolset is known as Blazor Forms and consists of a form component called EditForm, various input components, a data annotation validator, a validation error summary, and validation error labels.

EditForm takes care of orchestrating the state of all input components, through an instance of the EditContext class that is cascaded inside of the form. The orchestration comes from the interaction of both input components and the data annotation validator with this EditContext instance. A validation summary and error message labels don't take part in the orchestration but register to some EditContext events to be informed about errors.

EditForm must be passed the object whose properties must be rendered in its Model parameter. It is worth pointing out that...

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