Book Image

Modern Web Development with ASP.NET Core 3 - Second Edition

By : Ricardo Peres
Book Image

Modern Web Development with ASP.NET Core 3 - Second Edition

By: Ricardo Peres

Overview of this book

ASP.NET has been the preferred choice of web developers for a long time. With ASP.NET Core 3, Microsoft has made internal changes to the framework along with introducing new additions that will change the way you approach web development. This second edition has been thoroughly updated to help you make the most of the latest features in the framework, right from gRPC and conventions to Blazor, which has a new chapter dedicated to it. You’ll begin with an overview of the essential topics, exploring the Model-View-Controller (MVC) pattern, various platforms, dependencies, and frameworks. Next, you’ll learn how to set up and configure the MVC environment, before delving into advanced routing options. As you advance, you’ll get to grips with controllers and actions to process requests, and later understand how to create HTML inputs for models. Moving on, you'll discover the essential aspects of syntax and processes when working with Razor. You'll also get up to speed with client-side development and explore the testing, logging, scalability, and security aspects of ASP.NET Core. Finally, you'll learn how to deploy ASP.NET Core to several environments, such as Azure, Amazon Web Services (AWS), and Docker. By the end of the book, you’ll be well versed in development in ASP.NET Core and will have a deep understanding of how to interact with the framework and work cross-platform.
Table of Contents (26 chapters)
1
Section 1: The Fundamentals of ASP.NET Core 3
7
Section 2: Improving Productivity
14
Section 3: Advanced Topics
Appendix A: The dotnet Tool

Summary

Because JSON is the standard nowadays, we should stick with the JSON provider and enable the reloading of the configuration upon changes. We should add the common file first, and then optional overrides for each of the different environments (beware the order in which you add each source). We learned how the default configuration of ASP.NET Core already loads JSON files, including different ones for the different environments.

We then saw how to use configuration sections to better organize the settings, and we also looked at using POCO wrappers for them.

So, this made us ponder whether we should use IOptions<T> or our own POCO classes to inject configuration values. Well, if you don't want to pollute your classes or assemblies with references to .NET Core configuration packages, you should stick to your POCO classes. We're not too worried about this, so we recommend keeping the interface wrappers.

We will use IOptionsSnapshot&lt...