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ASP.NET 8 Best Practices

ASP.NET 8 Best Practices

By : Jonathan R. Danylko
4.8 (15)
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ASP.NET 8 Best Practices

ASP.NET 8 Best Practices

4.8 (15)
By: Jonathan R. Danylko

Overview of this book

As .NET 8 emerges as a long-term support (LTS) release designed to assist developers in migrating legacy applications to ASP.NET, this best practices book becomes your go-to guide for exploring the intricacies of ASP.NET and advancing your skills as a software engineer, full-stack developer, or web architect. This book will lead you through project structure and layout, setting up robust source control, and employing pipelines for automated project building. You’ll focus on ASP.NET components and gain insights into their commonalities. As you advance, you’ll cover middleware best practices, learning how to handle frontend tasks involving JavaScript, CSS, and image files. You’ll examine the best approach for working with Blazor applications and familiarize yourself with controllers and Razor Pages. Additionally, you’ll discover how to leverage Entity Framework Core and exception handling in your application. In the later chapters, you’ll master components that enhance project organization, extensibility, security, and performance. By the end of this book, you’ll have acquired a comprehensive understanding of industry-proven concepts and best practices to build real-world ASP.NET 8.0 websites confidently.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
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Summary

Exception handling is important but requires a level of experience when writing truly robust applications. Applications need to recover so that the user doesn’t have a jarring experience.

In this chapter, we learned about exception handling, when to use it, and where it makes sense, as well as performance considerations.

We ended this chapter by learning about the common techniques of exception handling by understanding the “prevention before exception” principle, why logging is important, and why exception handling is like unit testing.

We also learned that empty catch blocks are wasteful, how to simplify exceptions using exception filtering and pattern matching, when to use finally blocks, and how to rethrow exceptions properly.

In the next chapter, we’ll look at web API standards and how they are extremely important to the ASP.NET Core ecosystem.

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