At Build 2017, there were a lot of new features announced for ASP.NET Core 2.0, .NET Core 2.0 and .NET Standard 2.0. In this week's blog post, we're going to look at a few of the changes, specifically: the new configuration model and Razor Pages. I'll even cover a bug that was found in Razor Pages. Remember a preview build isn't necessarily ready for production
.NET Core 2.0 Preview 1 was released at MS Build 2017. Now that it's been out for a week, I'll take a look back at the information in the announcement, and I'll take a look at the benefits and drawbacks to using it.
Building .NET Core applications is great, but what are the options for hosting? In this post, I take you through the steps required to publish your application to a Digital Ocean droplet.
In this post, I'll discuss the process I took to go from the dotnet new command all the way to a single page application which sends GET requests, parses the responses and uses Angular2 to display rich, human readable versions of the parsed data
Microsoft's cloud hosting service, Azure, is really powerful. Visual Studio 2017 hooks directly into Azure, as does the .NET Core tooling. With that in mind, we're going to publish a WebApi application to Azure and watch it fly.
Now that we've all got Visual Studio 2017 installed, those of us who are .NET Core developers will need to know how to convert our project.json solutions to the new csproj one. Luckily, I have you covered.
The final part in our multi-post tutorial on using WebApi with Entity Framework Core. This week we're doing a little refactoring to add our Join table, Shadow Properties and the ability to Seed the database from a series of json files.
The penultimate part in our multi-post tutorial on using WebApi with Entity Framework Core. This week we'll be adding our Character class and service, a Character controller, a little refactoring, and creating POCOs for our Book and Character models
The second part in our multi-post tutorial on using WebApi with Entity Framework Core. This week we'll be adding an initial database migration, adding some seed data, building a Book service, and returning book JSON data in our Book controller
The first part in our multi-post tutorial on using WebApi with Entity Framework Core. This week we'll go through the data model design, the directory structure we'll be using for out code, and what we actually hope to achieve with this project.