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


We saw several aspects of programming that have to do with the ability of .NET Framework to introspect its own assemblies and invoke its functionality in a standard fashion and even use CodeDOM's possibilities to generate code at runtime, enabling a generation of templates and other code fragments at will.

We also saw a brief intro to Reflection.Emit just to check how it's possible to generate IL code at runtime and insert it into other executable code.

In the second part of this chapter, we covered the most common scenarios used in Office Automation, a technique that allows us to call functionalities included in Office, such as Excel and Word, and interact with them via proxy libraries (the Primary Interop Assemblies) in a way in which we gain almost absolute control over the other applications, being able to pass and recover information between our application and the Office partner via instructions emitted to these proxies.

We finally included a short introduction to the new way...