Book Image

C# 8 and .NET Core 3 Projects Using Azure - Second Edition

By : Paul Michaels, Dirk Strauss, Jas Rademeyer
Book Image

C# 8 and .NET Core 3 Projects Using Azure - Second Edition

By: Paul Michaels, Dirk Strauss, Jas Rademeyer

Overview of this book

.NET Core is a general-purpose, modular, cross-platform, and opensource implementation of .NET. The latest release of .NET Core 3 comes with improved performance and security features, along with support for desktop applications. .NET Core 3 is not only useful for new developers looking to start learning the framework, but also for legacy developers interested in migrating their apps. Updated with the latest features and enhancements, this updated second edition is a step-by-step, project-based guide. The book starts with a brief introduction to the key features of C# 8 and .NET Core 3. You'll learn to work with relational data using Entity Framework Core 3, before understanding how to use ASP.NET Core. As you progress, you’ll discover how you can use .NET Core to create cross-platform applications. Later, the book will show you how to upgrade your old WinForms apps to .NET Core 3. The concluding chapters will then help you use SignalR effectively to add real-time functionality to your applications, before demonstrating how to implement MongoDB in your apps. Finally, you'll delve into serverless computing and how to build microservices using Docker and Kubernetes. By the end of this book, you'll be proficient in developing applications using .NET Core 3.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)

Summary

In this chapter, we created a chatbot and gave it a basic understanding of language using LUIS. We took the default template and upgraded it from .NET Core 2.2 to .NET Core 3.0, and created a UWP client app that uses the Direct Line API to communicate with the bot.

Is our version of Eliza (Boris) more likely to pass the Turing test than the original? Maybe. If you wish to improve the model in LUIS then you may give it more of a fighting chance, but the real-world applications of chatbots and language recognition stretch far beyond the ability to fool someone into thinking they are talking to a human. You could easily link this to a voice synthesizer and telephony integration software (such as Twilio), and you will have an automated call center.

The Universal Windows Platform, at least for now, is what Microsoft is touting as the desktop platform of choice. Whether that...