Book Image

Developing Multi-Platform Apps with Visual Studio Code

By : Ovais Mehboob Ahmed Khan, Khusro Habib
Book Image

Developing Multi-Platform Apps with Visual Studio Code

By: Ovais Mehboob Ahmed Khan, Khusro Habib

Overview of this book

Microsoft Visual Studio Code is a powerful, lightweight code editor for modern web and cloud development. It is a source code editor that can be used with a variety of programming languages, which works on multiple platforms such as Linux, Windows, and macOS. This book provides extensive coverage of the tools, functionalities, and extensions available within the VS Code environment that will help you build multi-platform apps with ease. You’ll start with the installation of VS Code and learn about various tools and features that are essential for development. Progressing through the chapters, you'll explore the user interface while understanding tips and tricks for increasing productivity. Next, you’ll delve into VS Code extensions and discover how they can make life easier for developers. Later, the book shows you how to develop a sample application with different programming languages, tools, and runtimes to display how VS code can be used effectively for development, before helping you get to grips with source code version management and deployment on Azure with VS Code. Finally, you’ll build on your skills by focusing on remote development with VS Code. By the end of this book, you’ll have the knowledge you need to use Visual Studio Code as your primary tool for software development.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
1
Section 1: Introduction to Visual Studio Code
4
Section 2: Developing Microservices-Based Applications in Visual Studio Code
11
Section 3: Advanced Topics on Visual Studio Code

Azure Event Hubs with Kafka

Azure Event Hubs is a managed ingestion service that is simple to use for provision and integration with applications. It is very powerful and can quickly handle millions of messages per a second. It also supports the Kafka protocol, which is why client applications that currently rely on Kafka for message broker scenarios can easily shift to Azure Event Hubs without changing their application code.

What is Kafka?

Kafka is an open source software that works on a pub/sub model for storing and reading messages. Kafka persists messages/events published by publishers in a storage method known as topics, and consumers can read/consume those messages by registering to those topics.

Kafka can handle a high velocity and volume of data and serves the user like a high-speed filesystem for commit-log storage. Based on its characteristics, it helps to build large-scale applications that primarily rely on message broker techniques for service-to-service communications...