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Real-World Web Development with .NET 9

You're reading from   Real-World Web Development with .NET 9 Build websites and services using mature and proven ASP.NET Core MVC, Web API, and Umbraco CMS

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781835880388
Length
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Real-World Web Development with .NET 9: Build websites and services using mature and proven ASP.NET Core MVC, Web API, and Umbraco CMS
1 Introducing Web Development Using Controllers FREE CHAPTER 2 Building Websites Using ASP.NET Core MVC 3 Model Binding, Validation, and Data Using EF Core 4 Building and Localizing Web User Interfaces 5 Authentication and Authorization 6 Performance Optimization Using Caching 7 Web User Interface Testing Using Playwright 8 Configuring and Containerizing ASP.NET Core Projects 9 Building Web Services Using ASP.NET Core Web API 10 Building Web Services Using ASP.NET Core OData 11 Building Web Services Using FastEndpoints 12 Web Service Integration Testing 13 Web Content Management Using Umbraco 14 Customizing and Extending Umbraco 15 Epilogue

Configuring dependency services

Now that we have built a website that reads and writes to a database, we will review how registering dependency services and configuration of dependency injection work in more detail.

Introducing Dependency Injection

Dependency Injection (DI) is a design pattern used to implement Inversion of Control (IoC) to resolve dependencies in a program. Traditionally, the flow of control is dictated by your code, as it makes calls to reusable libraries or frameworks to use their functionality. IoC inverts this control so that the framework controls it instead.

For example, ASP.NET Core uses DI for IoC extensively. The framework controls the flow of request processing, and the developer's code is executed in response to specific events like HTTP GET or POST requests.

The main idea of DI is to decouple the creation of an object's dependencies from its own behavior, which allows for more modular, testable, and maintainable code. Instead of objects creating...

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