Book Image

Mastering Minimal APIs in ASP.NET Core

By : Andrea Tosato, Marco Minerva, Emanuele Bartolesi
Book Image

Mastering Minimal APIs in ASP.NET Core

By: Andrea Tosato, Marco Minerva, Emanuele Bartolesi

Overview of this book

The Minimal APIs feature, introduced in .NET 6, is the answer to code complexity and rising dependencies in creating even the simplest of APIs. Minimal APIs facilitate API development using compact code syntax and help you develop web APIs quickly. This practical guide explores Minimal APIs end-to-end and helps you take advantage of its features and benefits for your ASP.NET Core projects. The chapters in this book will help you speed up your development process by writing less code and maintaining fewer files using Minimal APIs. You’ll also learn how to enable Swagger for API documentation along with CORS and handle application errors. The book even promotes ideas to structure your code in a better way using the dependency injection library in .NET. Finally, you'll learn about performance and benchmarking improvements for your apps. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to fully leverage new features in .NET 6 for API development and explore how Minimal APIs are an evolution over classical web API development in ASP.NET Core.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
1
Part 1: Introduction
5
Part 2: What’s New in .NET 6?
10
Part 3: Advanced Development and Microservices Concepts

A brief history of the Microsoft Web API

A few years ago in 2007, .NET web applications went through an evolution with the introduction of ASP.NET MVC. Since then, .NET has provided native support for the Model-View-Controller pattern that was common in other languages.

Five years later, in 2012, RESTful APIs were the new trend on the internet and .NET responded to this with a new approach for developing APIs, called ASP.NET Web API. It was a significant improvement over Windows Communication Foundation (WCF) because it was easier to develop services for the web. Later, in ASP.NET Core these frameworks were unified under the name ASP.NET Core MVC: one single framework with which to develop web applications and APIs.

In ASP.NET Core MVC applications, the controller is responsible for accepting inputs, orchestrating operations, and at the end, returning a response. A developer can extend the entire pipeline with filters, binding, validation, and much more. It’s a fully featured framework for building modern web applications.

But in the real world, there are also scenarios and use cases where you don’t need all the features of the MVC framework or you have to factor in a constraint on performance. ASP.NET Core implements a lot of middleware that you can remove from or add to your applications at will, but there are a lot of common features that you would need to implement by yourself in this scenario.

At last, ASP.NET Core 6.0 has filled these gaps with minimal APIs.

Now that we have covered a brief history of minimal APIs, we will start creating a new minimal API project in the next section.