Now that we have seen all the basic features of ASP.NET Core 2.0 MVC, let's look at some of the more advanced features, which can help you during your daily work as a developer.
You will also learn how to use Visual Studio 2017 for testing your applications and thus providing better quality for your users.
When ASP.NET Core 2.0 uses server-side code for rendering HTML, it uses a View Engine. By default, when building standard views with their associated .cshtml
files, you use the Razor View Engine with the Razor syntax, for example.
By convention, this engine is able to work with views, which are located within the Views
folder. Since it is built-in and the default engine, it is bound automatically to the HTTP Request Pipeline without you doing anything for it to work.
If you need to use Razor for rendering files that are located outside of the Views
folder and don't come directly from the HTTP Request Pipeline, such as email templates for example...