Description
Reengineer .NET Code to Improve Quality, Update Architecture,
Access New Tools, and Accelerate Delivery of New Features As software ages, it becomes brittle: difficult to understand,
fix, manage, use, and improve. Developers working withÂż many
platforms have encountered this problem; now, developers working
with Microsoft’s .NET are facing it as well.¿ In
Reengineering .NET, leading .NET architect Bradley Irby introduces
proven best practices for revitalizing older .NET code and
integrating new architectural and development advances into
business-critical systems that can’t go offline.¿ Using
a step-by-step approach, .NET professionals can make legacy
enterprise software more reliable, maintainable,Âż attractive,
and usable—and make it easier to upgrade for years to
come. Through real-world case studies and extensive downloadable
sample code, Irby shows how to carefully plan a .NETÂż
reengineering project, understand the true current state of your
code, introduce unit testing and other agile methods, refactor to
services and controllers, and leverage powerful .NET reengineering
tools built into Microsoft Visual Studio 2012. This book is an indispensable resource for all developers,
architects, and project managers responsible for existing .NET code
bases and for a wide audience of non-technical managers and CTOs
who want to understand the uniqueÂż challenges faced by .NET
teams involved in application or system reengineering projects. Coverage includes Migrating legacy .NET software to more flexible, extensible,
and maintainable architectures—without breaking it Reengineering web applications with the MVC pattern, Winforms
software with MVP, and WPF/SilverlightÂż systems with MVVM Asking the right questions to predict refactoring problems
before they happen Planning and organizing reengineering projects to apply the
right expertise to each task at the right time Using innovative Test Doubling to make unit testing even more
effective Applying Dependency Inversion to break tight coupling and
promote easier development and testing Leveraging source control, defect tracking, and continuous
integration “Cleaning up” legacy solutions to improve them
before you even touch business logic Establishing solid development infrastructure to support your
reengineering project Refactoring to services—including advanced techniques
using Repositories, Domain Models,Âż and the Command
Dispatcher Refactoring to controller/view or ViewModel/View pairs
Reengineering .NET
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TypeBooks
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ProviderAddison-Wesley Professional
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PricingExclusively Paid
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Duration10h 34m
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CertificateNo Certificate
Reengineer .NET Code to Improve Quality, Update Architecture, Access New Tools, and Accelerate Delivery of New Features
As software ages, it becomes brittle: difficult to understand, fix, manage, use, and improve. Developers working with¿ many platforms have encountered this problem; now, developers working with Microsoft’s .NET are facing it as well.¿ In Reengineering .NET, leading .NET architect Bradley Irby introduces proven best practices for revitalizing older .NET code and integrating new architectural and development advances into business-critical systems that can’t go offline.¿ Using a step-by-step approach, .NET professionals can make legacy enterprise software more reliable, maintainable,¿ attractive, and usable—and make it easier to upgrade for years to come.
Through real-world case studies and extensive downloadable sample code, Irby shows how to carefully plan a .NETÂż reengineering project, understand the true current state of your code, introduce unit testing and other agile methods, refactor to services and controllers, and leverage powerful .NET reengineering tools built into Microsoft Visual Studio 2012.
This book is an indispensable resource for all developers, architects, and project managers responsible for existing .NET code bases and for a wide audience of non-technical managers and CTOs who want to understand the uniqueÂż challenges faced by .NET teams involved in application or system reengineering projects.
Coverage includes
Migrating legacy .NET software to more flexible, extensible, and maintainable architectures—without breaking it
Reengineering web applications with the MVC pattern, Winforms software with MVP, and WPF/SilverlightÂż systems with MVVM
Asking the right questions to predict refactoring problems before they happen
Planning and organizing reengineering projects to apply the right expertise to each task at the right time
Using innovative Test Doubling to make unit testing even more effective
Applying Dependency Inversion to break tight coupling and promote easier development and testing
Leveraging source control, defect tracking, and continuous integration
“Cleaning up” legacy solutions to improve them before you even touch business logic
Establishing solid development infrastructure to support your reengineering project
Refactoring to services—including advanced techniques using Repositories, Domain Models,¿ and the Command Dispatcher
Refactoring to controller/view or ViewModel/View pairs