Book Image

C# 10 and .NET 6 – Modern Cross-Platform Development - Sixth Edition

By : Mark J. Price
5 (1)
Book Image

C# 10 and .NET 6 – Modern Cross-Platform Development - Sixth Edition

5 (1)
By: Mark J. Price

Overview of this book

Extensively revised to accommodate all the latest features that come with C# 10 and .NET 6, this latest edition of our comprehensive guide will get you coding in C# with confidence. You’ll learn object-oriented programming, writing, testing, and debugging functions, implementing interfaces, and inheriting classes. The book covers the .NET APIs for performing tasks like managing and querying data, monitoring and improving performance, and working with the filesystem, async streams, and serialization. You’ll build and deploy cross-platform apps, such as websites and services using ASP.NET Core. Instead of distracting you with unnecessary application code, the first twelve chapters will teach you about C# language constructs and many of the .NET libraries through simple console applications. In later chapters, having mastered the basics, you’ll then build practical applications and services using ASP.NET Core, the Model-View-Controller (MVC) pattern, and Blazor.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
19
Index

Introducing Practical Applications of C# and .NET

The third and final part of this book is about practical applications of C# and .NET. You will learn how to build cross-platform projects such as websites, services, and mobile and desktop apps.

Microsoft calls platforms for building applications app models or workloads.

In Chapters 1 to 18 and 20, you can use OS-specific Visual Studio or cross-platform Visual Studio Code and JetBrains Rider to build all the apps. In Chapter 19, Building Mobile and Desktop Apps Using .NET MAUI (available at https://github.com/markjprice/cs10dotnet6/blob/main/9781801077361_Bonus_Content.pdf) , although you could use Visual Studio Code to build the mobile and desktop app, it is not easy. Visual Studio 2022 for Windows has better support for .NET MAUI than Visual Studio Code does (for now).

I recommend that you work through this and subsequent chapters sequentially because later chapters will reference projects in earlier chapters, and you...