Book Image

C# 7 and .NET Core Cookbook - Second Edition

Book Image

C# 7 and .NET Core Cookbook - Second Edition

Overview of this book

C# has recently been open-sourced and C# 7 comes with a host of new features for building powerful, cross-platform applications. This book will be your solution to some common programming problems that you come across with C# and will also help you get started with .NET Core 1.1. Through a recipe-based approach, this book will help you overcome common programming challenges and get your applications ready to face the modern world. We start by running you through new features in C# 7, such as tuples, pattern matching, and so on, giving you hands-on experience with them. Moving forward, you will work with generics and the OOP features in C#. You will then move on to more advanced topics, such as reactive extensions, Regex, code analyzers, and asynchronous programming. This book will also cover new, cross-platform .NET Core 1.1 features and teach you how to utilize .NET Core on macOS. Then, we will explore microservices as well as serverless computing and how these benefit modern developers. Finally, you will learn what you can do with Visual Studio 2017 to put mobile application development across multiple platforms within the reach of any developer.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)

Creating Controllers and using routing

Inside the MVC framework, the Controllers, Models, and Views need to work together to form the HTTP request and response cycle. The fundamental starting point, however, is calling the correct Controller based on the HTTP request it receives. Without that, our application built on the MVC framework can't work. In the MVC framework, the process of calling the correct Controller for the HTTP request is known as routing.

Getting ready

We can route HTTP requests to the correct Controllers by looking at what routing information is contained in the middleware of our application. The middleware then uses this routing information to see if the HTTP request needs to get sent to a Controller or not. Middleware will have a look at...