On the roadmap for ASP .NET Core 2.2, it mentions support for HTTP/2 in Kestrel and HttpClient:
- ASP .NET Core 2.2 Roadmap: https://github.com/aspnet/Announcements/issues/307
On the roadmap for ASP .NET Core 2.2, it mentions support for HTTP/2 in Kestrel and HttpClient:
ReSharper 2016.1.1. The update helps ReSharper see controllers outside of ASP.NET MVC areas and folders again (RSRP-458398, RSRP-455213); adds smart, license-aware update checks; enables bulk renaming in TypeScript (RSRP-458570); fixes Go to Everything so that it works after suspending and resuming ReSharper (RSRP-458404); improves performance in solutions with large JavaScript and JSON files (RSRP-458363); fixes pessimistic mode in value analysis (RSRP-458210); makes IL Viewer available via the Navigate To pop-up (RSRP-458323); improves details of ReactJS support (RSRP-458229, RSRP-458242, RSRP-458308). See all fixes in ReSharper 2016.1.1.
“My browser lost its cookies” has long been one of the most longstanding Support complaints in the history of browsers. Unfortunately, the reason that it has been such a longstanding issue is that it’s not the result of a single problem, and if the problem is intermittent (as it often is), troubleshooting the root cause may be non-trivial.
A quicker way to open source code repositories
In VS Code, we've offered integrated support for Git from the very beginning, and we've been supporting many other source control management (SCM) providers through extensions. This has allowed developers to clone and work with repositories directly within VS Code
ExtCore allows you to decouple your application into the modules (or extensions) and reuse that modules in other applications in various combinations. Each ExtCore extension may consist of one or more projects and each project may include everything you want (as any other ASP.NET Core project). Controllers, view components, views (added as resources and/or precompiled), static content (added as resources) will be resolved automatically. These projects (extension pieces) may be added to the application directly as dependencies in project.json of your main application project (as source code or NuGet packages), or by copying compiled DLL-files to the Extensions folder. ExtCore supports both of these approaches out of the box and at the same time.
SQL Server tutorial for beginners
150 videos
In this tutorial, we will start from the very basics and cover topics like joins, views, triggers, system functions, stored procedures, user defined scalar and table valued functions etc. These video tutorials will be useful for frehsers, experienced .NET and SQL Database developers.
ASP.NET Core 1.0 is the ground-up rewrite of ASP.NET, MVC and Web API, bringing a new paradigm in building web applications and APIs in .NET. With this rewrite brought new techniques in building SOLID applications, and updated some existing patterns and tools.
In this session, we'll take a lap around some of the major extension points of ASP.NET Core 1.0, walking through how these features can help us build cleaner, more maintainable systems. We'll cover web APIs, traditional MVC applications, controllers, views, filters, dependency injection, tag helpers and more. With a SOLID foundation, our ASP.NET Core applications will be dead simple to build and maintain.
My last post investigated ways to build a .NET Core desktop/console app with a web-rendered UI without bringing in the full weight of Electron. This seems to have interested a lot of people, so I decided to upgrade it to newer technologies and add cross-platform support.
The result is a little NuGet package called WebWindow that you can add to any .NET Core console app. It can open a native OS window (Windows/Mac/Linux) containing web-based UI, without your app having to bundle either Node or Chromium.