Book Image

Hands-On Full-Stack Web Development with ASP.NET Core

By : Tamir Dresher, Amir Zuker, Shay Friedman
Book Image

Hands-On Full-Stack Web Development with ASP.NET Core

By: Tamir Dresher, Amir Zuker, Shay Friedman

Overview of this book

Today, full-stack development is the name of the game. Developers who can build complete solutions, including both backend and frontend products, are in great demand in the industry, hence being able to do so a desirable skill. However, embarking on the path to becoming a modern full-stack developer can be overwhelmingly difficult, so the key purpose of this book is to simplify and ease the process. This comprehensive guide will take you through the journey of becoming a full-stack developer in the realm of the web and .NET. It begins by implementing data-oriented RESTful APIs, leveraging ASP.NET Core and Entity Framework. Afterward, it describes the web development field, including its history and future horizons. Then, you’ll build webbased Single-Page Applications (SPAs) by learning about numerous popular technologies, namely TypeScript, Angular, React, and Vue. After that, you’ll learn about additional related concerns involving deployment, hosting, and monitoring by leveraging the cloud; specifically, Azure. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to build, deploy, and monitor cloud-based, data-oriented, RESTful APIs, as well as modern web apps, using the most popular frameworks and technologies.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
Title Page
PacktPub.com
Contributors
Preface
Index

Distribution


Until now, to run the application, you've used the local development environment, along with the following command:

ng serve

For the sake of deployment, as will be covered in a later chapter, the app needs to be built for distribution purposes, meaning its finalized artifacts should be generated to be ready for deployment.

Angular CLI projects support distribution. Open the Terminal in the project folder and run the following command:

ng build

Afterward, you should see that a folder has been created, named dist. This folder contains the finalized artifacts of the application, which generally need to be hosted in an HTTP endpoint to become accessible.

When deploying to production, you should execute the following command:

ng build --prod

This command instructs Angular CLI to use the production configuration, as well as to enable the Ahead-of-Time (AOT) build process, which produces better-optimized artifacts for production purposes.

Note

Angular offers two ways of compilation, AOT and...