Book Image

Hands-On Mobile Development with .NET Core

By : Can Bilgin
Book Image

Hands-On Mobile Development with .NET Core

By: Can Bilgin

Overview of this book

.NET Core is the general umbrella term used for Microsoft’s cross-platform toolset. Xamarin, used for developing mobile applications, is one of the app model implementations for .NET Core infrastructure. In this book, you'll learn how to design, architect, and develop attractive, maintainable, and robust mobile applications for multiple platforms, including iOS, Android, and UWP, with the toolset provided by Microsoft using Xamarin, .NET Core, and Azure Cloud Services. This book will take you through various phases of application development using Xamarin, from environment setup, design, and architecture to publishing, with the help of real-world scenarios. Throughout the book, you'll learn how to develop mobile apps using Xamarin, Xamarin.Forms, and .NET Standard. You'll even be able to implement a web-based backend composed of microservices with .NET Core using various Azure services including, but not limited to, Azure App Services, Azure Active Directory, Notification Hub, Logic Apps, Azure Functions, and Cognitive Services. The book then guides you in creating data stores using popular database technologies such as Cosmos DB, SQL, and Realm. Finally, you will be able to set up an efficient and maintainable development pipeline to manage the application life cycle using Visual Studio App Center and Visual Studio Services.
Table of Contents (26 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
About Packt
Contributors
Preface
Index

Automated UI tests


Arguably one of the most painstaking and costly stages of the development cycle is manual certification testing, also called acceptance testing. In a usual non-automated verification cycle, certification testing can take up to 2-3 times longer than the development of a certain feature. Additionally, if previously implemented features are at risk, regression in those areas would have to be executed. In order to increase the release cadence and decrease the development cycles, it is essential that automated UI (or end-to-end ) tests are implemented. This way, the automated pipeline can be verified once and reused to verify the application's UI and integration with other systems, rather than executing manual testing in each release cycle.

App Center allows us to execute these automated tests on a number of real devices and include the automated runs in the development pipeline:

Xamarin.UITests is one of the supported automation frameworks that can be used to create these automated...