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Enterprise Application Development with C# 9 and .NET 5

Enterprise Application Development with C# 9 and .NET 5

By : Ravindra Akella, Verma, Arun Kumar Tamirisa , Kumar Kunani, Bhupesh Guptha Muthiyalu
3.9 (10)
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Enterprise Application Development with C# 9 and .NET 5

Enterprise Application Development with C# 9 and .NET 5

3.9 (10)
By: Ravindra Akella, Verma, Arun Kumar Tamirisa , Kumar Kunani, Bhupesh Guptha Muthiyalu

Overview of this book

.NET Core is one of the most popular programming platforms in the world for an increasingly large community of developers thanks to its excellent cross-platform support. This book will show you how to confidently use the features of .NET 5 with C# 9 to build robust enterprise applications. Throughout the book, you'll work on creating an enterprise app and adding a key component to the app with each chapter, before ?nally getting it ready for testing and deployment. You'll learn concepts relating to advanced data structures, the Entity Framework Core, parallel programming, and dependency injection. As you progress, you'll cover various authentication and authorization schemes provided by .NET Core to make your apps and APIs secure. Next, you'll build web apps using ASP.NET Core 5 and deploy them on the cloud while working with various cloud components using Azure. The book then shows you how to use the latest Microsoft Visual Studio 2019 and C# 9 to simplify developer tasks, and also explores tips and tricks in Visual Studio 2019 to improve your productivity. Later, you'll discover various testing techniques such as unit testing and performance testing as well as di?erent methods to deploy enterprise apps. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to create enterprise apps using the powerful features of .NET 5 and deploy them on the cloud.
Table of Contents (24 chapters)
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1
Section 1: Architecting an Enterprise Application and its Fundamentals
5
Section 2: Cross-Cutting Concerns
11
Section 3: Developing Your Enterprise Application
15
Section 4: Security
18
Section 5: Health Checks, Unit Testing, Deployment, and Diagnostics

Creating the controller and actions

We have already seen that routing takes care of mapping the request URI to an action method in a controller, so let's further understand how the action methods then load the respective views. As you will have noticed, all the views in the ASP.NET Core MVC project are part of the Views folder and when the action method execution is completed, it simply looks for Views/<ControllerName>/<Action>.cshtml.

For example, an action method mapping to the Products/Index route will load the Views/Products/Index.cshtml view. This is handled by calling the Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.Controller.View method at the end of every action method.

The following screenshot shows a pictorial representation of this from our MVC application:

Figure 11.7 – Controller-view mapping

There are additional overloads and helper methods that can override this behavior and route to a different view as needed. Before we talk about...

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