Book Image

Learn C# Programming

By : Marius Bancila, Raffaele Rialdi, Ankit Sharma
5 (1)
Book Image

Learn C# Programming

5 (1)
By: Marius Bancila, Raffaele Rialdi, Ankit Sharma

Overview of this book

The C# programming language is often developers’ primary choice for creating a wide range of applications for desktop, cloud, and mobile. In nearly two decades of its existence, C# has evolved from a general-purpose, object-oriented language to a multi-paradigm language with impressive features. This book will take you through C# from the ground up in a step-by-step manner. You'll start with the building blocks of C#, which include basic data types, variables, strings, arrays, operators, control statements, and loops. Once comfortable with the basics, you'll then progress to learning object-oriented programming concepts such as classes and structures, objects, interfaces, and abstraction. Generics, functional programming, dynamic, and asynchronous programming are covered in detail. This book also takes you through regular expressions, reflection, memory management, pattern matching, exceptions, and many other advanced topics. As you advance, you'll explore the .NET Core 3 framework and learn how to use the dotnet command-line interface (CLI), consume NuGet packages, develop for Linux, and migrate apps built with .NET Framework. Finally, you'll understand how to run unit tests with the Microsoft unit testing frameworks available in Visual Studio. By the end of this book, you’ll be well-versed with the essentials of the C# language and be ready to start creating apps with it.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)

Chapter 10

  1. The main characteristics of functional programming are immutability (objects have states that do not change) and side-effect free functions (functions do not modify values or states outside their local scope). Advantages of functional programming include the following: first, the code is easier to understand and maintain because functions do not change states and only depend on the arguments they receive. Second, the code is easier to test for the same reason. Third, it is simpler and more efficient to implement concurrency because data is immutable and functions don't have side effects, which avoids data races.
  2. A higher-order function is a function that takes one or more functions as arguments, returns a function, or both.
  3. C# provides the ability to pass functions as arguments, return functions from functions, assign functions to variables, store them in data structures, define anonymous functions, nest functions, and test references to functions for equality...