Book Image

Real-World Implementation of C# Design Patterns

By : Bruce M. Van Horn II
5 (3)
Book Image

Real-World Implementation of C# Design Patterns

5 (3)
By: Bruce M. Van Horn II

Overview of this book

As a software developer, you need to learn new languages and simultaneously get familiarized with the programming paradigms and methods of leveraging patterns, as both a communications tool and an advantage when designing well-written, easy-to-maintain code. Design patterns, being a collection of best practices, provide the necessary wisdom to help you overcome common sets of challenges in object-oriented design and programming. This practical guide to design patterns helps C# developers put their programming knowledge to work. The book takes a hands-on approach to introducing patterns and anti-patterns, elaborating on 14 patterns along with their real-world implementations. Throughout the book, you'll understand the implementation of each pattern, as well as find out how to successfully implement those patterns in C# code within the context of a real-world project. By the end of this design patterns book, you’ll be able to recognize situations that tempt you to reinvent the wheel, and quickly avoid the time and cost associated with solving common and well-understood problems with battle-tested design patterns.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
1
Part 1: Introduction to Patterns (Pasta) and Antipatterns (Antipasta)
4
Part 2: Patterns You Need in the Real World
8
Part 3: Designing New Projects Using Patterns

IDEs for C# development

Whenever I work in a new or unfamiliar language, the first thing I want to know about is the tools used to work in that language. Good tools make learning and working with the language much easier. Microsoft realized this, and when they released the C# language and the accompanying .NET runtime, they also released Visual Studio – an IDE written specifically for use with C# and another very popular programming language called Visual Basic.

Visual Basic was Visual Studio’s predecessor. During the 1990s, Visual Basic was the most widely used development language product from Microsoft. The company also sold an IDE geared for C++ development called Visual C++, and briefly and ineffectively dabbled in Java with Visual J++. Of these toolkits, Visual Basic was by far the most important. At the time, Visual C++ was used by “serious” developers. Microsoft Windows is written in C and C++, so naturally, the tooling in Visual C++ was first...