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Architecting ASP.NET Core Applications

Architecting ASP.NET Core Applications - Third Edition

By : Carl-Hugo Marcotte
4.4 (10)
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Architecting ASP.NET Core Applications

Architecting ASP.NET Core Applications

4.4 (10)
By: Carl-Hugo Marcotte

Overview of this book

This unique ASP.NET Core book will fill in the gaps in your REST API and backend designs. Learn how to build robust, maintainable, and flexible apps using Gang of Four (GoF) design patterns and modern architectural principles. This new edition is updated for .NET 8 and focuses exclusively on the backend, with new content on REST APIs, the REPR pattern, and building modular monoliths. You’ll start by covering foundational concepts like REST, the SOLID principles, Minimal APIs, dependency injection in .NET, and other ASP.NET Core 8 mechanisms. Then, you’ll learn to develop components using design patterns, including many from the GoF. Finally, you’ll explore organizing your application code with patterns that vary from layers to feature-oriented vertical slice designs, covering CQS and a deep dive into microservices along the way. A brand-new e-commerce project at the end of the book will tie it all together. This how-to guide will teach you how to assemble your own APIs from building blocks, to suit whatever real-world requirements you may have.
Table of Contents (27 chapters)
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Lock Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Principles and Methodologies
6
Section 2: Designing with ASP.NET Core
13
Section 3: Component Patterns
25
Other Books You May Enjoy
26
Index

Keep it simple, stupid (KISS)

This is another straightforward principle, yet one of the most important. Like in the real world, the more moving pieces, the more chances something breaks. This principle is a design philosophy that advocates for simplicity in design. It emphasizes the idea that systems work best when they are kept simple rather than made complex.Striving for simplicity might involve writing shorter methods or functions, minimizing the number of parameters, avoiding over-architecting, and choosing the simplest solution to solve a problem.Adding interfaces, abstraction layers, and complex object hierarchy adds complexity, but are the added benefits better than the underlying complexity? If so, they are worth it; otherwise, they are not.

As a guiding principle, when you can write the same program with less complexity, do it. This is also why predicting future requirements can often prove detrimental, as it may inadvertently inject unnecessary complexity into your codebase...

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Architecting ASP.NET Core Applications
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