Book Image

C# and .NET Core Test Driven Development

By : Ayobami Adewole
Book Image

C# and .NET Core Test Driven Development

By: Ayobami Adewole

Overview of this book

This book guides developers to create robust, production-ready C# 7 and .NET Core applications through the practice of test-driven development process. In C# and .NET Core Test-Driven Development, you will learn the different stages of the TDD life cycle, basics of TDD, best practices, and anti-patterns. It will teach you how to create an ASP.NET Core MVC sample application, write testable code with SOLID principles and set up a dependency injection for your sample application. Next, you will learn the xUnit testing framework and learn how to use its attributes and assertions. You’ll see how to create data-driven unit tests and mock dependencies in your code. You will understand the difference between running and debugging your tests on .NET Core on LINUX versus Windows and Visual Studio. As you move forward, you will be able to create a healthy continuous integration process for your sample application using GitHub, TeamCity, Cake, and Microsoft VSTS. By the end of this book, you will have learned how to write clean and robust code through the effective practice of TDD, set up CI build steps to test and build applications as well as how to package application for deployment on NuGet.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)

.NET Core versioning

Versioning the .NET Core SDK and runtime makes the platform easy to understand and allows better agility. The .NET Core platform essentially is distributed as a unit that consists of the different distributions of the frameworks, tools, installer, and NuGet packages. Also, versioning the .NET Core platform gives great flexibility as regards side-by-side application development on different platforms of .NET Core.

Beginning from .NET Core 2.0, a top-level version number that is easy to comprehend was used to version .NET Core. Some components of .NET Core version together while some do not. However, starting from Version 2.0, there is a consistent versioning strategy adopted for .NET Core distributions and components, these include the web pages, installers, and NuGet packages.

The versioning model used in .NET Core is based on the framework's runtime...