C# Application From Start to Finish: Tournament Tracker Course - YouTube
28 videos, 192,192 views, Last updated on Jan 13, 2019
Follow along in this free course as I show you how to create an application in C# from idea through the finished product. Everything is shown on screen and in great detail. Learn how to use SQL databases, CSV text files, custom events, Linq, Lambda expressions, emailing, and more. Everything you learn will be in context of a real application.
There's two ways to deploy a .NET Core application. There's FDD and SCD. Since TLAs (three letter acronyms) are stupid, that's Framework-dependent and Self-contained. When .NET Core is installed it ends up in C:\program files\dotnet on Windows, for example. In the "Shared" folder there's a bunch of .NET stuff that is, well, shared. There may be multiple folders, as you can see in my folder below. You can have many and multiple installs of .NET Core.
- Custom tasks with default contextType via tasks.vs.json are broken in Open Folder.
- No snapshot created for C++ native code in Memory Usage tool in the Diagnostic Tools window while debugging.
- Crash in VS 16.1.0 when pressing the link "search online".
- Fixed the issue where sometimes certain features (i.e. Find All References) in LiveShare guest session do not work.
- Fixed an issue where the devenv.exe process could hang around after shutdown of Visual Studio for up to 30 seconds.
سری توسعهی برنامههای #C در VS Code
C# and .NET Development in VS Code for Beginners
Writing C# applications in Visual Studio Code has never been easier! We recently introduced the new C# Dev Kit extension In this video series, you’ll learn how to get started writing, debugging, testing, and running your C# applications productively in VS Code using the new C# Dev Kit extension.
What’s Next in C#? - Mads Torgersen - Copenhagen DevFest 2023
NDC Conferences
Join Mads on a tour of upcoming language features in C#. While still very much in the works, C# 12 is starting to take shape. We touch on some of the ways, big and small, that C# is striving to make your life easier in the coming years.