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You're reading from  ASP.NET 8 Best Practices

Product typeBook
Published inDec 2023
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781837632121
Edition1st Edition
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Jonathan R. Danylko
Jonathan R. Danylko
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Jonathan R. Danylko

Jonathan "JD" Danylko is an award-winning, full-stack ASP.NET architect. He's used ASP.NET as his primary way to build websites since 2002 and before that, Classic ASP. Jonathan contributes to his blog (DanylkoWeb) on a weekly basis, has built a custom CMS, is a founder of Tuxboard (an open-source ASP.NET dashboard library), has been on various podcasts, and guest posted on the C# Advent Calendar for 6 years. Jonathan has worked in various industries for small, medium, and Fortune 100 companies, but currently works as an Architect at Insight Enterprise. The best way to contact Jonathan is through GitHub, LinkedIn, Twitter, email, or through the website.
Read more about Jonathan R. Danylko

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Creating an Emoji Middleware Component

With the rise of emoticons…sorry, emojis…in the 2000s, a number of legacy websites use the old-style of text-based emoticons instead of the more modern emojis. Legacy Content Management Systems (CMSs) must have a lot of these text-based characters in their content. To update a website’s content to replace all of these emoticons with proper emojis sounds extremely time-consuming.

In this section, we’ll apply our standards in creating an emoji Middleware component where, if it detects a text-based emoticon, it’ll convert it to a more modern emoji.

Encapsulating the Middleware

With this new Middleware component, we want to create it in its own class in EmojiMiddleware.cs.

Here is the first draft of our component:

public class EmojiMiddleware
{
    private readonly ILogger _logger;
    private readonly RequestDelegate _next;
    public EmojiMiddleware...
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ASP.NET 8 Best Practices
Published in: Dec 2023Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781837632121

Author (1)

author image
Jonathan R. Danylko

Jonathan "JD" Danylko is an award-winning, full-stack ASP.NET architect. He's used ASP.NET as his primary way to build websites since 2002 and before that, Classic ASP. Jonathan contributes to his blog (DanylkoWeb) on a weekly basis, has built a custom CMS, is a founder of Tuxboard (an open-source ASP.NET dashboard library), has been on various podcasts, and guest posted on the C# Advent Calendar for 6 years. Jonathan has worked in various industries for small, medium, and Fortune 100 companies, but currently works as an Architect at Insight Enterprise. The best way to contact Jonathan is through GitHub, LinkedIn, Twitter, email, or through the website.
Read more about Jonathan R. Danylko