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Refactoring with C#

Refactoring with C#

By : Matt Eland
5 (9)
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Refactoring with C#

Refactoring with C#

5 (9)
By: Matt Eland

Overview of this book

Software projects start as brand-new greenfield projects, but invariably become muddied in technical debt far sooner than you’d expect. In Refactoring with C#, you'll explore what technical debt is and how it arises before walking through the process of safely refactoring C# code using modern tooling in Visual Studio and more recent C# language features using C# 12 and .NET 8. This book, written by a Microsoft MVP, will guide you through the process of refactoring safely through advanced unit testing with XUnit and libraries like Moq, Snapper, and Scientist .NET. You'll explore maintainable code through SOLID principles and defensive coding techniques made possible in newer versions of C#. You'll also find out how to run code analysis and write custom Roslyn analyzers to detect and resolve issues unique to your code. The nature of coding is changing, and you'll explore how to use AI with the GitHub Copilot Chat to refactor, test, document, and generate code before ending with a discussion about communicating technical debt to leadership and getting organizational buy-in to refactor your code in enterprise organizations and in agile teams. By the end of this book, you'll understand the nature of refactoring and see how you can safely, effectively, and repeatably pay down the technical debt in your application while adding value to your business.
Table of Contents (24 chapters)
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Part 1: Refactoring with C# in Visual Studio
7
Part 2: Refactoring Safely
13
Part 3: Advanced Refactoring with AI and Code Analysis
18
Part 4: Refactoring in the Enterprise

Technical Debt, Code Smells, and Refactoring

New software projects start out clean and optimistic, but quickly grow in complexity and difficulty to maintain until the code is difficult to understand, brittle to change, and impossible to test.

If you’ve worked with code for any length of time, chances are you’ve come across code like this. In fact, if you’ve been in development for even a little bit of time, it’s likely you’ve written code you now regret.

It could be that the code is hard to read or understand. Maybe the code is inefficient or prone to errors. Perhaps the code was built under a certain set of business assumptions that later changed. Maybe the code simply no longer conforms to the standards you and your team have agreed to. Whatever the reason, bad code feels like it is practically everywhere in codebases of any significant size or age.

This code litters our software projects and reduces our development speed, causes us to...

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