Book Image

.NET Core 2.0 By Example

By : Neha Shrivastava, Rishabh Verma
Book Image

.NET Core 2.0 By Example

By: Neha Shrivastava, Rishabh Verma

Overview of this book

With the rise in the number of tools and technologies available today, developers and architects are always exploring ways to create better and smarter solutions. Before, the differences between target platforms was a major roadblock, but that's not the case now. .NET Core 2.0 By Example will take you on an exciting journey to building better software. This book provides fresh and relevant content to .NET Core 2.0 in a succinct format that’s enjoyable to read. It also delivers concepts, along with the implications, design decisions, and potential pitfalls you might face when targeting Linux and Windows systems, in a logical and simple way. With the .NET framework at its center, the book comprises of five varied projects: a multiplayer Tic-tac-toe game; a real-time chat application, Let'sChat; a chatbot; a microservice-based buying-selling application; and a movie booking application. You will start each chapter with a high-level overview of the content, followed by the above example applications described in detail. By the end of each chapter, you will not only be proficient with the concepts, but you’ll also have created a tangible component in the application. By the end of the book, you will have built five solid projects using all the tools and support provided by the .NET Core 2.0 framework.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Title Page
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Introducing Blazor


Blazor is a new experiment by the ASP.NET team. Blazor got its name from two words, Browser and Razor.

Blazor is an experimental web UI framework using C#, Razor, and HTML, running in the browser through WebAssembly.

What is WebAssembly? WebAssembly or wasm is an open, new-age format standard, with an initial version that has reportedly reached cross-browser consensus. It is described as a new portable, size-and load-time-efficient format suitable for compilation to the Web. WebAssembly is a new type of code that can be run in modern web browsers. It is a low-level assembly-like language with a compact binary format that runs with near-native performance and provides languages, such as C/C++, with a compilation target so that they can run on the web. It is also designed to run alongside JavaScript, allowing both to work together. It is a browser improvement. Since it is a binary format, we'll be able to compile binary bundles that compress to a smaller size than the text...