آینده #C به نقل از طراحان آن
The future of C#
Over the last year we shipped no less than three "point releases" of C# (7.1, 7.2 and 7.3), full of small but useful language features. Mads and Dustin will race you through a tour of these, before turning to some of the big things we have in store for the future: Nullable reference types, recursive patterns, asynchronous streams and more.
This is also our first release from the brand new .NET Community Toolkit repository, which will be the home of all our .NET libraries going forward.
Mozilla و تعدیل 250 نفر
کتابخانه restive.js
The Easiest Way to Make your Website Responsive or Adaptive Demo
Not many are familiar with this awesome feature of dotnet core. Aspnet
team is actively maintaining a project named JavascriptServices
; Along with other packages, it includes the NodeServices
package. Using this package, one can easily create an instance of node
and execute JavaScript code (function) in the backend. If you think of it right now, you can see that it actually opens up a wide variety of development opportunities. By opportunities, I mean; the ASP.NET core project is trying hard to make its package eco-system (NuGet) rich but while doing it, why not get advantages of other package eco-system as well, right? When I talk about other than nuget package manager, the first name that comes to my mind is Npm
(node package manager). Npm
is the largest package manager out there on this very day and its growing rapidly. By using NodeServices
package, we can now use (not all of the npm
packages but) most of the npm
packages in our backend development. So, let me show you how to configure NodeServices
in your aspnet core project and use it to execute JavaScript code on the backend.