Book Image

Improving your C# Skills

By : Ovais Mehboob Ahmed Khan, John Callaway, Clayton Hunt, Rod Stephens
Book Image

Improving your C# Skills

By: Ovais Mehboob Ahmed Khan, John Callaway, Clayton Hunt, Rod Stephens

Overview of this book

This Learning Path shows you how to create high performing applications and solve programming challenges using a wide range of C# features. You’ll begin by learning how to identify the bottlenecks in writing programs, highlight common performance pitfalls, and apply strategies to detect and resolve these issues early. You'll also study the importance of micro-services architecture for building fast applications and implementing resiliency and security in .NET Core. Then, you'll study the importance of defining and testing boundaries, abstracting away third-party code, and working with different types of test double, such as spies, mocks, and fakes. In addition to describing programming trade-offs, this Learning Path will also help you build a useful toolkit of techniques, including value caching, statistical analysis, and geometric algorithms. This Learning Path includes content from the following Packt products: • C# 7 and .NET Core 2.0 High Performance by Ovais Mehboob Ahmed Khan • Practical Test-Driven Development using C# 7 by John Callaway, Clayton Hunt • The Modern C# Challenge by Rod Stephens
Table of Contents (26 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
About Packt
Contributors
Preface
8
What to Know Before Getting Started
17
Files and Directories
18
Advanced C# and .NET Features
Index

Chapter 17. Files and Directories

This chapter describes problems that work with files and directories. Some merely provide practice on working with files and the filesystem. You may find others to be a welcome addition to your programming toolkit. For example, some examples show how to search for duplicate files, load an image file without locking it, and save JPG images with different levels of compression.

Note that working with files and directories can be particularly dangerous for a program because that are many ways those operations can fail. For example, a directory might not exist, a file might be locked, a program might not have permission to read or write in a particular directory, or a disk drive may be corrupted. The examples in this chapter use try…catch blocks to protect themselves from unexpected file and directory errors but, to save space, I have not included that error handling code in the text shown here. To see all of the programs' details, download the example solutions...