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C# 10 and .NET 6 – Modern Cross-Platform Development

You're reading from   C# 10 and .NET 6 – Modern Cross-Platform Development Build apps, websites, and services with ASP.NET Core 6, Blazor, and EF Core 6 using Visual Studio 2022 and Visual Studio Code

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801077361
Length 826 pages
Edition 6th Edition
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Author (1):
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Mark J. Price Mark J. Price
Author Profile Icon Mark J. Price
Mark J. Price
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Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Hello, C#! Welcome, .NET! 2. Speaking C# FREE CHAPTER 3. Controlling Flow, Converting Types, and Handling Exceptions 4. Writing, Debugging, and Testing Functions 5. Building Your Own Types with Object-Oriented Programming 6. Implementing Interfaces and Inheriting Classes 7. Packaging and Distributing .NET Types 8. Working with Common .NET Types 9. Working with Files, Streams, and Serialization 10. Working with Data Using Entity Framework Core 11. Querying and Manipulating Data Using LINQ 12. Improving Performance and Scalability Using Multitasking 13. Introducing Practical Applications of C# and .NET 14. Building Websites Using ASP.NET Core Razor Pages 15. Building Websites Using the Model-View-Controller Pattern 16. Building and Consuming Web Services 17. Building User Interfaces Using Blazor 18. Epilogue 19. Index

Improving scalability using asynchronous tasks

When building a desktop or mobile app, multiple tasks (and their underlying threads) can be used to improve responsiveness, because while one thread is busy with the task, another can handle interactions with the user.

Tasks and their threads can be useful on the server side too, especially with websites that work with files, or request data from a store or a web service that could take a while to respond. But they are detrimental to complex calculations that are CPU-bound, so leave these to be processed synchronously as normal.

When an HTTP request arrives at the web server, a thread from its pool is allocated to handle the request. But if that thread must wait for a resource, then it is blocked from handling any more incoming requests. If a website receives more simultaneous requests than it has threads in its pool, then some of those requests will respond with a server timeout error, 503 Service Unavailable.

The threads...

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