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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

Performing content negotiation

Content negotiation is theprocessby which the application returns data in a format that is requested by the client. This is usually done for API-style invocations, not requests that serve HTML. For example, a certain client might want data returned in JSON format, while others might prefer XML. ASP.NET Core supports this.

There are essentially two ways to achieve this:

  • Through a route or query string parameter
  • Through theAccept request header

The first approach lets you specify the format that you're interested in on the URL. Let's see how this works first:

  1. Say you have the following action method:
public Model Process() { ... }
  1. Let's forget whatModelactually is as it's just a POCO class that contains the properties you're interested in. It could be as simple as this:
public class Model
{
public...
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