Book Image

Adopting .NET 5

By : Hammad Arif, Habib Qureshi
Book Image

Adopting .NET 5

By: Hammad Arif, Habib Qureshi

Overview of this book

.NET 5 is the unification of all .NET technologies in a single framework that can run on all platforms and provide a consistent experience to developers, regardless of the device, operating system (OS), or cloud platform they choose. By updating to .NET 5, you can build software that can quickly adapt to the rapidly changing demands of modern consumers and stay up to date on the latest technology trends in .NET. This book provides a comprehensive overview of all the technologies that will form the future landscape of .NET using practical examples based on real-world scenarios, along with best practices to help you migrate from legacy platforms. You’ll start by learning about Microsoft’s vision and rationale for the unification of the platforms. Then, you’ll cover all the new language enhancements in C# 9. As you advance, you’ll find out how you can align yourself with modern technology trends, focusing on everything from microservices to orchestrated containerized deployments. Finally, you’ll learn how to effectively integrate machine learning in .NET code. By the end of this .NET book, you’ll have gained a thorough understanding of the .NET 5 platform, together with a readiness to adapt to future .NET release cycles, and you’ll be able to make architectural decisions about porting legacy systems and code bases to a newer platform.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
1
Section 1: Features and Capabilities
4
Section 2: Design and Architecture
7
Section 3: Migration
10
Section 4: Bonus

Summary

We have covered a brief introduction to the history of .NET Framework and .NET Core and now know the fundamentals of the framework, which are the essential first steps for a solid development foundation and architecture. We also learned the main features and capabilities of .NET 5 by comparing them directly with the capabilities of .NET Framework and .NET Core and we understood the benefits of one over the other. We also learned what the release schedule for .NET looks like from now on and what information is provided to us in the form of industry statistics, all of this designed to enable us to adopt the right technology at the right time and with the planned landscape already inline with our own application architecture and life cycle.

We saw the different types of applications that can be quickly and easily developed with it. We visited the support life cycle for both .NET Framework and .NET Core, which envisage us to architect and design the application software well in advance, with a better and long-term view of our own application product life cycle.

Lastly, we dived into performance improvements and some of the statistics by again doing a comparison with some of the previous versions of .NET. Since .NET 5 is a superset of all of the previous .NET Core versions with added features, it therefore already incorporates all of the previous performance gains applied to the earlier versions, which is why we also overviewed the performance improvements of the previous .NET Core versions and, finally, the specific improvements in relation to .NET 5.

I hope you have enjoyed learning the features of .NET Core and .NET 5 as much as I did and are now looking forward to the next portion of the book, which focuses on design and architecture.