Book Image

Bootstrap for ASP.NET MVC - Second Edition

By : Pieter van der Westhuizen
Book Image

Bootstrap for ASP.NET MVC - Second Edition

By: Pieter van der Westhuizen

Overview of this book

One of the leading open source frontend frameworks, Bootstrap has undergone a significant change and introduced several features that make designing compelling, next-generation UIs much simpler. Integrating Bootstrap with ASP.NET's powerful components can further enhance its capabilities. This book guides you through the process of creating an ASP.NET MVC website from scratch using Bootstrap. After a primer on the fundamentals of Bootstrap, you will learn your way around and create a new ASP.NET MVC project in Visual Studio. You will move on to learn about the various Bootstrap components as well as techniques to include them in your own projects. The book includes practical examples to show you how to use open-source plugins with Bootstrap and ASP.NET MVC and guides you through building an ASP.NET MVC website using Bootstrap, utilizing layout and user-interface components. At the end of this book, you will find some valuable tips and tricks to help you get the most out of your Bootstrap-integrated and ASP.NET MVC-integrated website.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Bootstrap for ASP.NET MVC Second Edition
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

What is Visual Studio Code?


Visual Studio Code, in essence, is an open source, cross-platform text editor. It is based on the Electron framework, formerly known as Atom Shell, which is a framework that enables you to write cross-platform desktop applications using HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. If you've ever used the Atom text editor by GitHub, you'll see a strong resemblance between that and Visual Studio Code.

Note

Atom is a hackable/customizable text editor from GitHub. It is also open source and can be downloaded from https://atom.io/.

Visual Studio Code can be used by developers to build web applications in HTML, CSS, and JavaScript, and also supports TypeScript and ASP.NET Core. It is folder-based rather than project-based, which means you simply need to open a folder containing your project files instead of opening a project file such as .csproj.

It features IntelliSense (which will be familiar to anyone that has used Visual Studio in the past) and also supports debugging and Git Source...