Book Image

An Atypical ASP.NET Core 6 Design Patterns Guide - Second Edition

By : Carl-Hugo Marcotte
5 (1)
Book Image

An Atypical ASP.NET Core 6 Design Patterns Guide - Second Edition

5 (1)
By: Carl-Hugo Marcotte

Overview of this book

An Atypical ASP.NET Core 6 Design Patterns Guide, Second Edition approaches programming like playing with LEGO®: snapping small pieces together to create something beautiful. Thoroughly updated for ASP.NET Core 6, with further coverage of microservices patterns, data contracts, and event-driven architecture, this book gives you the tools to build and glue reliable components together to improve your programmatic masterpieces. The chapters are organized based on scale and topic, allowing you to start small and build on a strong base, the same way that you would develop a program. You will begin by exploring basic design patterns, SOLID architectural principles, dependency injection, and other ASP.NET Core 6 mechanisms. You will explore component-scale patterns, and then move to higher level application-scale patterns and techniques to better structure your applications. Finally, you'll advance to the client side to connect the dots with tools like Blazor and make ASP.NET Core a viable full-stack web development framework. You will supplement your learning with practical use cases and best practices, exploring a range of significant Gang of Four (GoF) design patterns along the way. By the end of the book, you will be comfortable combining and implementing patterns in different ways, and crafting software solutions of any scale.
Table of Contents (31 chapters)
Preface
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Principles and Methodologies
5
Section 2: Designing for ASP.NET Core
11
Section 3: Designing at Component Scale
15
Section 4: Designing at Application Scale
21
Section 5: Designing the Client Side
25
Acronyms Lexicon
26
Other Books You May Enjoy
27
Index
Appendices

An overview of containers

Containers are an evolution of virtualization. With containers, we virtualize applications instead of machines. To share resources, we can leverage virtual or physical machines. A container contains everything that is required for the containerized app to run, including an OS.

Containers can help us set up environments, ensure the correctness of applications when moving them between environments (local, staging, and production), and more. By packaging everything into a single container image, our application becomes more portable than ever before; no more “it was working on my machine.” Another perk of containers is the possibility to configure the networking and relationships between containers. Moreover, containers are lightweight, allowing us to create a new one in a matter of seconds, leading to on-demand provisioning of resources that can scale up with traffic spikes, then scale back down when the demand decreases.

Containers can...