Book Image

ASP.NET Core MVC 2.0 Cookbook

By : Jason De Oliveira, Engin Polat, Stephane Belkheraz
Book Image

ASP.NET Core MVC 2.0 Cookbook

By: Jason De Oliveira, Engin Polat, Stephane Belkheraz

Overview of this book

The ASP.NET Core 2.0 Framework has been designed to meet all the needs of today’s web developers. It provides better control, support for test-driven development, and cleaner code. Moreover, it’s lightweight and allows you to run apps on Windows, OSX and Linux, making it the most popular web framework with modern day developers. This book takes a unique approach to web development, using real-world examples to guide you through problems with ASP.NET Core 2.0 web applications. It covers Visual Studio 2017- and ASP.NET Core 2.0-specifc changes and provides general MVC development recipes. It explores setting up .NET Core, Visual Studio 2017, Node.js modules, and NuGet. Next, it shows you how to work with Inversion of Control data pattern and caching. We explore everyday ASP.NET Core MVC 2.0 patterns and go beyond it into troubleshooting. Finally, we lead you through migrating, hosting, and deploying your code. By the end of the book, you’ll not only have explored every aspect of ASP.NET Core MVC 2.0, you’ll also have a reference you can keep coming back to whenever you need to get the job done.
Table of Contents (26 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Sharing NuGet packages with the community


After having created our own NuGet package in the Creating a NuGet package recipe, we will publish it in the NuGet public repository.

How to do it...

  1. First, we create an account on the NuGet website:
  1. Next, we fill in the form on the NuGet website:

We are now registered:

  1. Let's click on the username of the account to see the page account (sbz in our case). On this page, we can see our API key that we can include in our Visual Studio projects to generate NuGet packages:
  1. Next, we click on the Upload a Package button:
  1. Let's go to the Upload Package page to upload a package. We can now see that our package was just uploaded to the NuGet public repository: