Book Image

ASP.NET Core and Vue.js

By : Devlin Basilan Duldulao
Book Image

ASP.NET Core and Vue.js

By: Devlin Basilan Duldulao

Overview of this book

Vue.js 3 is faster and smaller than the previous version, and TypeScript’s full support out of the box makes it a more maintainable and easier-to-use version of Vue.js. Then, there's ASP.NET Core 5, which is the fastest .NET web framework today. Together, Vue.js for the frontend and ASP.NET Core 5 for the backend make a powerful combination. This book follows a hands-on approach to implementing practical methodologies for building robust applications using ASP.NET Core 5 and Vue.js 3. The topics here are not deep dive and the book is intended for busy .NET developers who have limited time and want a quick implementation of a clean architecture with popular libraries. You’ll start by setting up your web app’s backend, guided by clean architecture, command query responsibility segregation (CQRS), mediator pattern, and Entity Framework Core 5. The book then shows you how to build the frontend application using best practices, state management with Vuex, Vuetify UI component libraries, Vuelidate for input validations, lazy loading with Vue Router, and JWT authentication. Later, you’ll focus on testing and deployment. All the tutorials in this book support Windows 10, macOS, and Linux users. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to build an enterprise full-stack web app, use the most common npm packages for Vue.js and NuGet packages for ASP.NET Core, and deploy Vue.js and ASP.NET Core to Azure App Service using GitHub Actions.
Table of Contents (25 chapters)
1
Section 1: Getting Started
4
Section 2: Backend Development
13
Section 3: Frontend Development
20
Section 4: Testing and Deployment

Summary

You have arrived at the end of this chapter; you have learned how to include the Vue.js app in the ASP.NET Core Web API project to run and ship them together as one. You also know how Cross-Origin Resource Sharing or CORS works. In a nutshell, it's a security feature of the browser that blocks requests from different domains or origins. You have learned how to enable and configure a CORS policy in ASP.NET Core to allow incoming requests from other domains or origins.

In the next chapter, we will start sending GET requests to our ASP.NET Core Web API and use Vuex for managing the state of our Vue.js app. It will be a significant and big chapter, so take a break first and come back after 40 to 60 minutes.