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ASP.NET Core 6 and Angular

You're reading from   ASP.NET Core 6 and Angular Full-stack web development with ASP.NET 6 and Angular 13

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803239705
Length 780 pages
Edition 5th Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Valerio De Sanctis Valerio De Sanctis
Author Profile Icon Valerio De Sanctis
Valerio De Sanctis
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introducing ASP.NET and Angular FREE CHAPTER 2. Getting Ready 3. Looking Around 4. Front-End and Back-End Interactions 5. Data Model with Entity Framework Core 6. Fetching and Displaying Data 7. Forms and Data Validation 8. Code Tweaks and Data Services 9. Back-End and Front-End Debugging 10. ASP.NET Core and Angular Unit Testing 11. Authentication and Authorization 12. Progressive Web Apps 13. Beyond REST – Web API with GraphQL 14. Real-Time Updates with SignalR 15. Windows, Linux, and Azure Deployment 16. Other Books You May Enjoy
17. Index

Getting a SQL Server instance

Let’s close this gap once and for all and provide ourselves with a SQL Server instance. As we already mentioned, there are two major routes we can take:

  • Install a local SQL Server instance (Express or Developer edition) on our development machine
  • Set up a SQL database (and/or server) on Azure using one of the several options available on that platform

The former option embodies the classic, cloudless approach that software and web developers have been using since the dawn of time: a local instance is easy to pull off and will provide everything we’re going to need in development and production environments... as long as we don’t care about data redundancy, heavy infrastructure load and possible performance impacts (in the case of high-traffic websites), scaling, and other bottlenecks due to the fact that our server is a single physical entity.

In Azure, things work in a different way: putting our DBMS...

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