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  • Book Overview & Buying ASP.NET Core 8 and Angular
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ASP.NET Core 8 and Angular

ASP.NET Core 8 and Angular

By : Valerio De Sanctis
4.3 (12)
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ASP.NET Core 8 and Angular

ASP.NET Core 8 and Angular

4.3 (12)
By: Valerio De Sanctis

Overview of this book

If you want to learn how to use ASP.NET Core with Angular effectively, this hands-on guide is for you. Improve the way you create, debug, and deploy web applications while keeping up to date with the latest developments in .NET 8 and modern Angular, including .NET Minimal APIs and the new Angular standalone API defaults. You’ll begin by setting up SQL Server 2022 and building a data model with Entity Framework Core. You’ll progress to fetching and displaying data, handling user input with Angular reactive forms, and implementing front-end and back-end validators for maximum effect. After that, you will perform advanced debugging and explore unit testing features with xUnit for .NET, and Jasmine and Karma for Angular. You’ll use Identity API endpoints in ASP.NET Core and functional route guards in Angular to add authentication and authorization to your apps. Finally, you’ll learn how to deploy to Windows, Linux, and Azure. By the end of this book, you will understand how to tie together the front-end and back-end to build and deploy secure and robust web applications.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
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16
Other Books You May Enjoy
17
Index

Solution overview

The first thing that catches the eye is that, as we’ve already mentioned, the layout of a standard ASP.NET Core solution is quite different from what it used to be in ASP.NET 5 and earlier versions. The most notable thing is that we have two different projects – one for Angular (healthcheck.client) and one for the ASP.NET Core Web API (HealthCheck.Server) – that start together and need to interact with each other. If you have previous “classic” ASP.NET single-project experience, you may find such an approach quite different from what you are used to working with.

The best thing about the new approach is that we’re instantly able to distinguish the ASP.NET back-end part from the Angular front-end part, which could be troublesome with the previous single-project experience, when the two stacks were often intertwined.

Let’s quickly review their overall structure to better understand how each one of them works...

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