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C# 12 and .NET 8 – Modern Cross-Platform Development Fundamentals

C# 12 and .NET 8 – Modern Cross-Platform Development Fundamentals

By : Mark J. Price
4.4 (74)
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C# 12 and .NET 8 – Modern Cross-Platform Development Fundamentals

C# 12 and .NET 8 – Modern Cross-Platform Development Fundamentals

4.4 (74)
By: Mark J. Price

Overview of this book

This latest edition of the bestselling Packt series will give you a solid foundation to start building projects using modern C# and .NET with confidence. You'll learn about object-oriented programming; writing, testing, and debugging functions; and implementing interfaces. You'll take on .NET APIs for managing and querying data, working with the fi lesystem, and serialization. As you progress, you'll explore examples of cross-platform projects you can build and deploy, such as websites and services using ASP.NET Core. This latest edition integrates .NET 8 enhancements into its examples: type aliasing and primary constructors for concise and expressive code. You'll handle errors robustly through the new built-in guard clauses and explore a simplified implementation of caching in ASP.NET Core 8. If that's not enough, you'll also see how native ahead-of-time (AOT) compiler publish lets web services reduce memory use and run faster. You'll work with the seamless new HTTP editor in Visual Studio 2022 to enhance the testing and debugging process. You'll even get introduced to Blazor Full Stack with its new unified hosting model for unparalleled web development flexibility.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
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17
Index

Writing LINQ expressions

The first question we need to answer is a fundamental one: why does LINQ exist?

Comparing imperative and declarative language features

LINQ was introduced in 2008 with C# 3 and .NET Framework 3. Before that, if a C# and .NET programmer wanted to process a sequence of items, they had to use procedural, aka imperative, code statements. For example, a loop:

  1. Set the current position to the first item.
  2. Check if the item is one that should be processed by comparing one or more properties against specified values. For example, is the unit price greater than 50, or is the country equal to Belgium?
  3. If there’s a match, process that item. For example, output one or more of its properties to the user, update one or more properties to new values, delete the item, or perform an aggregate calculation like counting or summing values.
  4. Move on to the next item. Repeat until all items have been processed.

Procedural code tells the compiler how to achieve a goal. Do this...

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