Book Image

Learning ASP.NET Core 2.0

By : Jason De Oliveira, Michel Bruchet
Book Image

Learning ASP.NET Core 2.0

By: Jason De Oliveira, Michel Bruchet

Overview of this book

The ability to develop web applications that are highly efficient but also easy to maintain has become imperative to many businesses. ASP.NET Core 2.0 is an open source framework from Microsoft, which makes it easy to build cross-platform web applications that are modern and dynamic. This book will take you through all of the essential concepts in ASP.NET Core 2.0, so you can learn how to build powerful web applications. The book starts with a brief introduction to the ASP.NET Core framework and the improvements made in the latest release, ASP.NET Core 2.0. You will then build, test, and debug your first web application very quickly. Once you understand the basic structure of ASP.NET Core 2.0 web applications, you'll dive deeper into more complex concepts and scenarios. Moving on, we'll explain how to take advantage of widely used frameworks such as Model View Controller and Entity Framework Core 2 and you'll learn how to secure your applications. Finally, we'll show you how to deploy and monitor your applications using Azure, AWS, and Docker. After reading the book, you'll be able to develop efficient and robust web applications in ASP.NET Core 2.0 that have high levels of customer satisfaction and adoption.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
Foreword
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Using logging


When you are developing your applications, you use one of the well-known integrated development environments such as Visual Studio 2017 or Visual Studio Code, as described in the beginning chapters of the book. You do this every day, and most of the things you do become reflexes and you do them automatically after some time.

It is natural for you to be able to debug your applications and understand what is happening during runtime, by using the advanced debugging features of Visual Studio 2017, for example. Looking up variable values, seeing what methods get called in what order, understanding what instances are injected, and capturing exceptions, are key to building applications that are robust and respond to business needs.

Then, when deploying your applications to production environments, you suddenly miss all of those features. Rarely will you find a production environment where Visual Studio is installed, but, errors and unexpected behaviors will happen and you will need...