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An Atypical ASP.NET Core 6 Design Patterns Guide

You're reading from   An Atypical ASP.NET Core 6 Design Patterns Guide A SOLID adventure into architectural principles and design patterns using .NET 6 and C# 10

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803249841
Length 678 pages
Edition 2nd 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 (31) Chapters Close

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

Summary

Layering is one of the most used architectural techniques when it comes to designing applications. An application is often split into multiple different layers, each managing a single responsibility. The three most popular layers are presentation, domain, and data. You are not limited to three layers, and you can split each one into smaller layers (or smaller pieces inside the same conceptual layer). This allows you to create composable, manageable, and maintainable applications.

Moreover, you can create abstraction layers to invert the flow of dependency and separate interfaces from implementations, as we saw in the Abstract layers section. You can persist the domain entities directly or create an independent model for the data layer. You can also use an anemic model (no logic or method) or a rich model (packed with entity-related logic). You can share that model between multiple layers or have each layer possess its own.

Out of layering was born Clean Architecture...

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