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C# 11 and .NET 7 – Modern Cross-Platform Development Fundamentals - Seventh Edition

You're reading from  C# 11 and .NET 7 – Modern Cross-Platform Development Fundamentals - Seventh Edition

Product type Book
Published in Nov 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803237800
Pages 818 pages
Edition 7th Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Mark J. Price Mark J. Price
Profile icon Mark J. Price

Table of Contents (19) Chapters

Preface 1. Hello, C#! Welcome, .NET! 2. Speaking C# 3. Controlling Flow, Converting Types, and Handling Exceptions 4. Writing, Debugging, and Testing Functions 5. Building Your Own Types with Object-Oriented Programming 6. Implementing Interfaces and Inheriting Classes 7. Packaging and Distributing .NET Types 8. Working with Common .NET Types 9. Working with Files, Streams, and Serialization 10. Working with Data Using Entity Framework Core 11. Querying and Manipulating Data Using LINQ 12. Introducing Web Development Using ASP.NET Core 13. Building Websites Using ASP.NET Core Razor Pages 14. Building Websites Using the Model-View-Controller Pattern 15. Building and Consuming Web Services 16. Building User Interfaces Using Blazor 17. Epilogue 18. Index

Publishing your code for deployment

If you write a novel and you want other people to read it, you must publish it.

Most developers write code for other developers to use in their own projects, or for users to run as an app. To do so, you must publish your code as packaged class libraries or executable applications.

There are three ways to publish and deploy a .NET application. They are:

  • Framework-dependent deployment (FDD)
  • Framework-dependent executable (FDE)
  • Self-contained

If you choose to deploy your application and its package dependencies, but not .NET itself, then you rely on .NET already being on the target computer. This works well for web applications deployed to a server because .NET and lots of other web applications are likely already on the server.

Framework-dependent deployment (FDD) means you deploy a DLL that must be executed by the dotnet command-line tool. Framework-dependent executables (FDE) means you deploy an EXE that...

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