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  • Book Overview & Buying The C# Workshop
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The C# Workshop

The C# Workshop

By : Jason Hales, Almantas Karpavicius, Mateus Viegas
4.5 (14)
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The C# Workshop

The C# Workshop

4.5 (14)
By: Jason Hales, Almantas Karpavicius, Mateus Viegas

Overview of this book

C# is a powerful, versatile language that can unlock a variety of career paths. But, as with any programming language, learning C# can be a challenging process. With a wide range of different resources available, it’s difficult to know where to start. That's where The C# Workshop comes in. Written and reviewed by industry experts, it provides a fast-paced, supportive learning experience that will quickly get you writing C# code and building applications. Unlike other software development books that focus on dry, technical explanations of the underlying theory, this Workshop cuts through the noise and uses engaging examples to help you understand how each concept is applied in the real world. As you work through the book, you'll tackle realistic exercises that simulate the type of problems that software developers work on every day. These mini-projects include building a random-number guessing game, using the publisher-subscriber model to design a web file downloader, creating a to-do list using Razor Pages, generating images from the Fibonacci sequence using async/await tasks, and developing a temperature unit conversion app which you will then deploy to a production server. By the end of this book, you'll have the knowledge, skills, and confidence to advance your career and tackle your own ambitious projects with C#.
Table of Contents (10 chapters)
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Data Structures

.NET provides various types of in-built data structures, such as the Array, List, and Dictionary types. At the heart of all data structures are the IEnumerable and ICollection interfaces. Classes that implement these interfaces offer a way to enumerate through the individual elements and to manipulate their items. There is rarely a need to create your own classes that derive directly from these interfaces, as all the required functionality is covered by the built-in collection types, but it is worth knowing the key properties as they are heavily used throughout .NET.

The generic version of each collection type requires a single type parameter, which defines the type of elements that can be added to a collection, using the standard <T> syntax of the generic types.

The IEnumerable interface has a single property, that is, IEnumerator<T> GetEnumerator(). This property returns a type that provides methods that allow the caller to iterate through the elements...

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The C# Workshop
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