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Modern Web Development with ASP.NET Core 3

You're reading from   Modern Web Development with ASP.NET Core 3 An end to end guide covering the latest features of Visual Studio 2019, Blazor and Entity Framework

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789619768
Length 802 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Ricardo Peres Ricardo Peres
Author Profile Icon Ricardo Peres
Ricardo Peres
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Table of Contents (26) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: The Fundamentals of ASP.NET Core 3
2. Getting Started with ASP.NET Core FREE CHAPTER 3. Configuration 4. Routing 5. Controllers and Actions 6. Views 7. Section 2: Improving Productivity
8. Using Forms and Models 9. Implementing Razor Pages 10. API Controllers 11. Reusable Components 12. Understanding Filters 13. Security 14. Section 3: Advanced Topics
15. Logging, Tracing, and Diagnostics 16. Understanding How Testing Works 17. Client-Side Development 18. Improving Performance and Scalability 19. Real-Time Communication 20. Introducing Blazor 21. gRPC and Other Topics 22. Application Deployment 23. Assessments 24. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix A: The dotnet Tool

View compilation

Normally, a view is only compiled when it is first used—that is, a controller action returns ViewResult. What this means is that any eventual syntax errors will only be caught at runtime when the framework is rendering the page; plus, even if there are no errors, ASP.NET Core takes some time (in the order of milliseconds, mind you) to compile the view. This does not need to be the case, however.

Unlike previous versions, ASP.NET Core 3 does not recompile a view when the Razor file changes, by default. For that, you have to restart your server. If you want to have this behavior back, you need to add a reference to the Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.Razor.RuntimeCompilation NuGet package and add the following line to the services configuration:

services
.AddMvc()
.AddRazorRuntimeCompilation();

Or, you may prefer to enable this only for the debug version of your app, which excludes it from production builds. In that case, you can do...

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