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Clean Code with C#

Clean Code with C#

By : Jason Alls
4.5 (2)
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Clean Code with C#

Clean Code with C#

4.5 (2)
By: Jason Alls

Overview of this book

Traditionally associated with Windows desktop applications and game development, C# has expanded into web, cloud, and mobile development. However, despite its extensive coding features, professionals often encounter issues with efficiency, scalability, and maintainability due to poor code. Clean Code in C# guides you in identifying and resolving these problems using coding best practices. This book starts by comparing good and bad code to emphasize the importance of coding standards, principles, and methodologies. It then covers code reviews, unit testing, and test-driven development, and addresses cross-cutting concerns. As you advance through the chapters, you’ll discover programming best practices for objects, data structures, exception handling, and other aspects of writing C# computer programs. You’ll also explore API design and code quality enhancement tools, while studying examples of poor coding practices to understand what to avoid. By the end of this clean code book, you’ll have the developed the skills needed to apply industry-approved coding practices to write clean, readable, extendable, and maintainable C# code.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
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How AOP works with PostSharp

You add the PostSharp package to your project. Then, you annotate your code with attributes. The C# compiler builds your code into binary, and then PostSharp analyzes the binary and injects the implementation of aspects. Although binaries are modified with injected code at compile time, your project’s source code remains unaltered. This means you can keep your code nice, clean, and simple, which in turn makes maintenance, reuse, and extending existing code bases much easier in the long term.

PostSharp has some really good ready-made patterns for you to utilize. These cover Model-View-ViewModel (MVVM), caching, multithreading, logging and architecture validation, and more. But the good news is that if none of these meets your requirements, then you can automate your own patterns by extending the aspect framework and/or the architecture framework.

With the aspect framework, you develop your simple or composite aspect, apply it to the code, and...

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