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ASP.NET Core SignalR in a nutshell

SynopsisASP.NET Core SignalR in a nutshell, available at $49.99, has...
ASP.NET Core SignalR in a nutshell  No.1

ASP.NET Core SignalR in a nutshell, available at $49.99, has an average rating of 4.1, with 47 lectures, 5 quizzes, based on 77 reviews, and has 2424 subscribers.

You will learn about SignalR on .NET Core This course is ideal for individuals who are Web developers who want to enable a persistent real-time communication between the client and the server or ASP .NET Core developers or Any other web developers using Microsoft programming stack It is particularly useful for Web developers who want to enable a persistent real-time communication between the client and the server or ASP .NET Core developers or Any other web developers using Microsoft programming stack.

Enroll now: ASP.NET Core SignalR in a nutshell

Summary

Title: ASP.NET Core SignalR in a nutshell

Price: $49.99

Average Rating: 4.1

Number of Lectures: 47

Number of Quizzes: 5

Number of Published Lectures: 47

Number of Published Quizzes: 5

Number of Curriculum Items: 52

Number of Published Curriculum Objects: 52

Original Price: $19.99

Quality Status: approved

Status: Live

What You Will Learn

  • SignalR on .NET Core
  • Who Should Attend

  • Web developers who want to enable a persistent real-time communication between the client and the server
  • ASP .NET Core developers
  • Any other web developers using Microsoft programming stack
  • Target Audiences

  • Web developers who want to enable a persistent real-time communication between the client and the server
  • ASP .NET Core developers
  • Any other web developers using Microsoft programming stack
  • Are you a web developer? If so, you would know that many web development projects these days require the ability to establish a persistent connection between a client and a server without having to keep sending repeated requests from the client. As you may also know, such functionality may be hard to implement.

    However, if you can build your web application in?ASP.NET?Core, there is a way to make this whole process easy. There is a library called SignalR. This is what I’m going to talk about in this course. As well as doing all the heavy lifting for you, the library abstracts away all complex implementation details, so your code can be made extremely simple.

    However, as you would already know, nothing in programming is simple in absolute terms. Programming is a complex activity, so even those concepts that are relatively simple require some practice and studying.

    This is why I’ve created this course. By the end of it, you should be able to build a web application that clients will be able to establish a persistent connection with and exchange the data with in real time.

    Course Curriculum

    Chapter 1: Introduction

    Lecture 1: Introduction

    Lecture 2: Transport mechanisms

    Lecture 3: Setting up your environment

    Lecture 4: Setting up your solution

    Chapter 2: Setting up SignalR Hub

    Lecture 1: Introduction to SignalR Hub

    Lecture 2: Example of SignalR Hub

    Lecture 3: SignalR Hub explained

    Lecture 4: An example of a strongly typed Hub

    Lecture 5: Strongly typed Hub explained

    Lecture 6: SignalR Hub documentation

    Chapter 3: Setting up SignalR clients

    Lecture 1: Introduction to SignalR clients

    Lecture 2: Setting up JavaScript client

    Lecture 3: Example of JavaScript client

    Lecture 4: JavaScript client explained

    Lecture 5: Setting up .NET Client

    Lecture 6: Example of .NET client

    Lecture 7: .NET client explained

    Lecture 8: Additional resources

    Chapter 4: Connecting a standard WebSocket client

    Lecture 1: Why WebSockets client

    Lecture 2: Example of .NET WebSockets client

    Lecture 3: .NET WebSockets client explained

    Lecture 4: Other types of WebSockets clients

    Chapter 5: SignalR security

    Lecture 1: Introduction

    Lecture 2: Example of CORS configuration

    Lecture 3: CORS configuration explained

    Lecture 4: Setting up authentication

    Lecture 5: Example of Identity authentication

    Lecture 6: Identity authentication explained

    Lecture 7: User authentication example

    Lecture 8: User authentication explained

    Lecture 9: Enabling messaging individual users

    Lecture 10: Messaging individual users

    Lecture 11: Further reading on web application security

    Chapter 6: Scaling out SignalR hub

    Lecture 1: Why would you need to scale out

    Lecture 2: Introducing Redis cache

    Lecture 3: Setting up Redis

    Lecture 4: Connecting SignalR Hub to Redis

    Lecture 5: Multiple Hub instances

    Lecture 6: Example of Hub Context

    Lecture 7: Hub Context explained

    Lecture 8: Setting up Azure SignalR Service

    Lecture 9: Azure SignalR dependencies

    Lecture 10: Connecting application to the SignalR Service

    Lecture 11: Azure SignalR code explained

    Lecture 12: More on scaling-out SignalR

    Chapter 7: Wrapping up

    Lecture 1: You did it!

    Lecture 2: Where to go from here

    Instructors

  • ASP.NET Core SignalR in a nutshell  No.2
    Fiodar Sazanavets
    Full stack senior software developer specializing in .NET
  • Rating Distribution

  • 1 stars: 3 votes
  • 2 stars: 3 votes
  • 3 stars: 18 votes
  • 4 stars: 25 votes
  • 5 stars: 28 votes
  • Frequently Asked Questions

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