Book Image

Apps and Services with .NET 7

By : Mark J. Price
Book Image

Apps and Services with .NET 7

By: Mark J. Price

Overview of this book

Apps and Services with .NET 7 is for .NET 6 and .NET 7 developers who want to kick their C# and .NET understanding up a gear by learning the practical skills and knowledge they need to build real-world applications and services. It covers specialized libraries that will help you monitor and improve performance, secure your data and applications, and internationalize your code and apps. With chapters that put a variety of technologies into practice, including Web API, OData, gRPC, GraphQL, SignalR, and Azure Functions, this book will give you a broader scope of knowledge than other books that often focus on only a handful of .NET technologies. It covers the latest developments, libraries, and technologies that will help keep you up to date. You’ll also leverage .NET MAUI to develop mobile apps for iOS and Android as well as desktop apps for Windows and macOS.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
22
Index

What have you learned in this book?

A lot!

Technologies covered in this book

In this book, you have learned about many of the most important and popular technologies for building apps and services with .NET, as shown in Figure 20.1:

Graphical user interface, application, table, Excel  Description automatically generated

Figure 20.1: Technologies for building apps and services with .NET

The technologies can be divided into layers:

  • Presentation (green; at the top): This layer presents information and handles interactions with the user like editing and showing notifications.
  • Transport and data exchange format (gray; second from the top): This layer transports data between other layers. There are two main factors that affect efficiency: the transport protocol, and the data exchange format. Text-based formats like JSON and XML are easier to debug since they are human-readable. Binary formats are more efficient for larger amounts of data. Older protocols like HTTP/1.1 are more interoperable but less efficient. Newer protocols like HTTP...