Book Image

Mastering C# and .NET Framework

Book Image

Mastering C# and .NET Framework

Overview of this book

Mastering C# and .NET Framework will take you in to the depths of C# 6.0/7.0 and .NET 4.6, so you can understand how the platform works when it runs your code, and how you can use this knowledge to write efficient applications. Take full advantage of the new revolution in .NET development, including open source status and cross-platform capability, and get to grips with the architectural changes of CoreCLR. Start with how the CLR executes code, and discover the niche and advanced aspects of C# programming – from delegates and generics, through to asynchronous programming. Run through new forms of type declarations and assignments, source code callers, static using syntax, auto-property initializers, dictionary initializers, null conditional operators, and many others. Then unlock the true potential of the .NET platform. Learn how to write OWASP-compliant applications, how to properly implement design patterns in C#, and how to follow the general SOLID principles and its implementations in C# code. We finish by focusing on tips and tricks that you'll need to get the most from C# and .NET. This book also covers .NET Core 1.1 concepts as per the latest RTM release in the last chapter.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Mastering C# and .NET Framework
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgements
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Summary


In this chapter, we looked at distinct tools and techniques related to the optimization of applications and performance.

First, we saw the concepts of Application Performance Engineering and we went through the tools available inside Visual Studio 2015 (any version) and the modern browsers.

Then, we covered some of the most important processes to follow in order to detect issues and performance problems and explored how to use classes to fine-tune measurement.

Finally, we reviewed some of the most important techniques recommended for the optimization of websites, especially those written with ASP.NET MVC.

In the final chapter, we will cover many features that are difficult to include in any of the previous chapters, including advanced techniques, such as parallelism, platform invoke and an introduction to the new .NET Core.