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Hands-On Microservices with C#

You're reading from   Hands-On Microservices with C# Designing a real-world, enterprise-grade microservice ecosystem with the efficiency of C# 7

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789533682
Length 254 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Matt Cole Matt Cole
Author Profile Icon Matt Cole
Matt Cole
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Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Let's Talk Microservices, Messages, and Tools 2. ReflectInsight – Microservice Logging Redefined FREE CHAPTER 3. Creating a Base Microservice and Interface 4. Designing a Memory Management Microservice 5. Designing a Deployment Monitor Microservice 6. Designing a Scheduling Microservice 7. Designing an Email Microservice 8. Designing a File Monitoring Microservice 9. Creating a Machine Learning Microservice 10. Creating a Quantitative Financial Microservice 11. Trello Microservice – Board Status Updating 12. Microservice Manager – The Nexus 13. Creating a Blockchain Bitcoin Microservice 14. Adding Speech and Search to Your Microservice 15. Best Practices

Classes versus interfaces

What came first, the chicken or the egg? Should I pass a class or an interface? People will fight over these topics until the cows come home. So why don't we just get knee deep into it and put a stake in the ground. For us, let's define an interface type as a specification of a protocol, potentially supported by many object types. Should we use base classes instead of interfaces whenever possible? From a versioning perspective, classes are more flexible than interfaces. With a class, we can ship version 1.0 and then, in version 2.0, add a new method to the class. As long as the method is not abstract, any existing derived classes continue to function unchanged.

Another potential hazard for us is that because interfaces do not support implementation inheritance, the pattern that applies to classes does not apply to interfaces. Adding a method...

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