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Introduction to ASP.NET MVC Blogging Engine in 60 minutes Adnan Masood www.AdnanMasood.com www.CodePlex.com/YABE
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About Me aka. Shameless Self Promotion Sr. Software Engineer / Tech Lead for Green Dot Corp. (Financial Institution) Design and Develop Connected Systems Involved with SoCal Dev community, co-founded San Gabriel Valley.NET Developers Group. Published author and speaker. MS. Computer Science, MCPD (Enterprise Developer), MCT, MCSD.NET Doctoral Student - Areas of Interest: Machine learning, Bayesian Inference, Data Mining, Collaborative Filtering, Recommender Systems. Contact at adnanmasood@acm.org Read my Blog at www.AdnanMasood.comwww.AdnanMasood.com Doing a session in IASA 2008 in San Francisco on Aspect Oriented Programming; for details visit http://www.iasaconnections.com
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YABE Yet another blogging engine Team – Adnan Masood – Jeff Bergman – Sean Xiao www.CodePlex.com/YABE Uses Linq to SQL for data access Syndication Libraries for the RSS/Atom Feeds Experiment in learning MVC
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Latest Developments in the MVC world Scott Guthrie, adaptation from RoR How does this relate to Visual Studio 2008/.NET 3.5 SP1 Beta? It doesn't. For now ASP.NET MVC is an out-of-band Web downloadable thing. It's bin deployable (meaning you don't HAVE to put them in the GAC) and you don't even need to tell your hosting/ISP. They are what they are - three DLLs in a folder. Bam. MVC Preview 3 will not be affected by having SP1 installed. Preview 3 will include newer privately versioned bin deployable builds of the Routing and Abstractions DLLs. That way these assemblies will not be affected by the versions in the GAC installed by SP1, because they will have different version numbers.
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MVC vs. “Classic” ASP.NET
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Ok, so what is this MVC thingy? It is an ASP.NET framework that performs data exchange by using a REST model versus the postback model of classic ASP.NET. Each page is split into two distinct components - controller and view - that operate over the same model of data. This is opposed to the classic code-behind model where no barrier is set that forces you to think in terms of separation of concerns and controllers and views. However, by keeping the code-behind class as thin as possible, and designing the business layer appropriately, a good developer could achieve separation of concerns even without adopting MVC and its overhead. MVC, however, is a model superior to a properly-done code-behind for its inherent support for test-driven development.
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Model View Controller Pattern
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More Concrete Model View Controller Pattern
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Why use ASP.NET MVC? It enables clean separation of concerns, testability, and TDD by default. All core contracts within the MVC framework are interface based and easily mockable (it includes interface based IHttpRequest/IHttpResponse intrinsics). You can unit test the application without having to run the Controllers within an ASP.NET process (making unit testing fast). You can use any unit testing framework you want to-do this testing (including NUnit, MBUnit, MS Test, etc). It is highly extensible and pluggable. Everything in the MVC framework is designed so that it can be easily replaced/customized (for example: you can optionally plug-in your own view engine, routing policy, parameter serialization, etc). It also supports using existing dependency injection and IOC container models (Windsor, Spring.Net, NHibernate, etc). It includes a very powerful URL mapping component that enables you to build applications with clean URLs. URLs do not need to have extensions within them, and are designed to easily support SEO and REST-friendly naming patterns. For example, I could easily map the /products/edit/4 URL to the "Edit" action of the ProductsController class in my project above, or map the /Blogs/scottgu/10-10- 2007/SomeTopic/ URL to a "DisplayPost" action of a BlogEngineController class. The MVC framework supports using the existing ASP.NET.ASPX,.ASCX, and.Master markup files as "view templates" (meaning you can easily use existing ASP.NET features like nested master pages, snippets, declarative server controls, templates, data-binding, localization, etc). It does not, however, use the existing post-back model for interactions back to the server. Instead, you'll route all end-user interactions to a Controller class instead - which helps ensure clean separation of concerns and testability (it also means no viewstate or page lifecycle with MVC based views). The ASP.NET MVC framework fully supports existing ASP.NET features like forms/windows authentication, URL authorization, membership/roles, output and data caching, session/profile state management, health monitoring, configuration system, the provider architecture, etc.
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Why MVC is so different? REST is an architectural pattern that defines how network resources should be defined and addressed in order to gain shorter response times, clear separation of concerns between the front-end and back-end of a networked system. REST is based on three following principles: An application expresses its state and implements its functionality by acting on logical resources Each resource is addressed using a specific URL syntax All addressable resources feature a contracted set of operations
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The answer to Url’s Life, 42. In the MVC Framework, a URL is seen as the mean to address a logical server resource, but not necessarily an ASPX file to parse. So the URLs employed by the pages of an MVC Framework application have a custom format that the application itself mandates. In the end, the MVC Framework employs a centralized HTTP handler that recognizes an application-specific syntax for links. In addition, each addressable resource exposes a well-known set of operations and a uniform interface for executing operations.
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What? No more postbacks! The MVC Framework doesn't support classic postbacks and viewstate and doesn't consider any URL as the endpoint to a physical server file to parse and compile to a class. In ASP.NET, you have a 1:1 correspondence between a URL and a resource.
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Why MVC? (links) The REST-like Aspect of MVC Framework ASP.NET MVC Framework: An early look RSS Feed with the new ASP.NET MVC Framework RSS Feed with the new ASP.NET MVC Framework MVC, REST, and the Alternative ASP.NET Framework MVC, REST, and the Alternative ASP.NET Framework ASP.NET MVC framework - ready or not
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Why MVC? Very Clean separation of Concerns Unit Testing Model that leads you down a maintainable path (prevent crappy code) Clean Urls and Html
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Front Controller Classic asp.net framework is Page Controller Map Urls to classes/controllers instead of Pages
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Unit Testing Mock Objects to simulate responses. Don’t have to go through a page or view Red/Green Testing
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Unit Testing Create instance of controller controller.ViewEngine = new TestViewEngine(); Uses Mock Objects
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Features Routing Controller View Dependency Injection Pluggable Interfaces for all core contracts
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Url Url no longer points to the view/aspx page A Url maps to a controller class Allows more flexibility to map Urls Url routing engine, Route table Routes are tokenized strings Can use RegEx
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Route Examples / / http://domain/Home/CustomerDetail/45 Html.Link for creating outbound urls Html.Link(,, )
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Controller IController Execute(IHttpContext ctx, RouteData routeData) class MyController : Controller [ControllerAction] attribute
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View Similar to existing page No postback or view state Not all page events will fire Editing forms will be more work Separate page for viewing, editing, and updating Ajax will use UserControls as update panels but request still goes through the control
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Views View probably shouldn’t directly access data sources or services. Use the ViewData which stores the model the view is rendering ViewPage, ViewPage
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Future of the ASP.NET MVC MVC for the Enterprise Classic Asp.Net for quicker implementations
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References Download the Latest MVC Preview 3 http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?FamilyId=92F2 A8F0-9243-4697-8F9A-FCF6BC9F66AB&displaylang=en http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?FamilyId=92F2 A8F0-9243-4697-8F9A-FCF6BC9F66AB&displaylang=en ASP.NET MVC Preview 3 http://www.hanselman.com/blog/ASPNETMVCPreview3.aspx http://www.hanselman.com/blog/ASPNETMVCPreview3.aspx Quick Start Guides http://quickstarts.asp.net/3-5-extensions/mvc/default.aspx http://quickstarts.asp.net/3-5-extensions/mvc/default.aspx Upcoming Changes in Routing http://haacked.com/archive/2008/04/10/upcoming-changes-in- routing.aspx http://haacked.com/archive/2008/04/10/upcoming-changes-in- routing.aspx Scott Guthrie’s Post on ASP.NET MVC Framework http://weblogs.asp.net/scottgu/archive/2007/10/14/asp-net-mvc- framework.aspx
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Questions? ASP.NET MVC is a new paradigm for.NET Developers; a new way to think about programming web application. Any Questions / Comments … feel free to contact adnanmasood@gmail.com adnanmasood@gmail.com Visit www.CodePlex.com/YABEwww.CodePlex.com/YABE Visit www.AdnanMasood.comwww.AdnanMasood.com
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