Book Image

Mastering Visual Studio 2017

Book Image

Mastering Visual Studio 2017

Overview of this book

Visual Studio 2017 is the all-new IDE released by Microsoft for developers, targeting Microsoft and other platforms to build stunning Windows and web apps. Learning how to effectively use this technology can enhance your productivity while simplifying your most common tasks, allowing you more time to focus on your project. With this book, you will learn not only what VS2017 offers, but also what it takes to put it to work for your projects. Visual Studio 2017 is packed with improvements that increase productivity, and this book will get you started with the new features introduced in Visual Studio 2017 IDE and C# 7.0. Next, you will learn to use XAML tools to build classic WPF apps, and UWP tools to build apps targeting Windows 10. Later, you will learn about .NET Core and then explore NuGet, the package manager for the Microsoft development platform. Then, you will familiarize yourself with the debugging and live unit testing techniques that comes with the IDE. Finally, you'll adapt Microsoft's implementation of cloud computing with Azure, and the Visual Studio integration with Source Control repositories.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)

Getting to know about deconstruction syntax

Deconstruction is a syntax to split a value into multiple parts and store those parts individually into new variables. For example, tuples that return multiple values. Let us take the following method as an example, which returns a tuple of two string variables, Title and Author (see the New changes to tuples section):

    public (string Title, string Author) GetBookDetails() 
    { 
       return (Title: "Mastering Visual Studio 2017",
Author: "Kunal Chowdhury"); }

Now, when you call the method GetBookDetails(), it will return a tuple. You can access its elements by calling the element name, as follows:

  var bookDetails = GetBookDetails(); // returns Tuple 
  Console.WriteLine("Title  : " + bookDetails.Title); 
  Console.WriteLine("Author : " + bookDetails.Author); 

In a...