Just a general list of shit worth chilling to, all of these can be found on my BandCamp Page
I'll expand this as I think of more
{ | |
"Name" : "TestTomato", | |
"Origin" : "3095", | |
"Tastes" : "2" | |
} |
using System; | |
using System.Collections.Generic; | |
using System.Linq; | |
using System.Threading.Tasks; | |
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc; | |
using Newtonsoft.Json; | |
using Newtonsoft.Json.Linq; | |
// For more information on enabling Web API for empty projects, visit https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkID=397860 |
Just a general list of shit worth chilling to, all of these can be found on my BandCamp Page
I'll expand this as I think of more
The Model-View-Controller (also known as MVC) in many ways is the cornerstone of modern web application development. Through seperation of these three major aspects of an application we are able to ensure that our product is not only a solid user experience but a structured development experience as well. Before we get into what MVC is and how we can facilitate it in modern Web Application development, we need to ensure that we're up to scratch with our basic web technologies.
An explorative report by Alex Billson
AngularJs for years has provided a very solid framework for creating scalable MVC (Model View Controller) and MVVM (Model View ViewModel) applications using HTML, CSS and JavaScript.
As shown in this graph from May 2016, newer versions of the framework such as Angular 2 and Angular 4 despite being more feature-full and efficient than its predecessors have still failed to
Alex Billson (@pielegacy)
The Frozen Oak is a revolution in beverages and being the forward thinking company that Oak is it was only right that an associated Frozen Oak Locator was developed. This locator is powered by a versatile, simple,
Learn the power of ASP.NET Core's Startup.Configure method with examples.
The Configure
method in Startup.cs
is essentially a fundamental part of Microsoft's OWIN implementation
Katana. To sum up what OWIN and Katana are:
// JS array equivalents to C# LINQ methods - by Dan B. | |
// Here's a simple array of "person" objects | |
var people = [ | |
{ name: "John", age: 20 }, | |
{ name: "Mary", age: 35 }, | |
{ name: "Arthur", age: 78 }, | |
{ name: "Mike", age: 27 }, | |
{ name: "Judy", age: 42 }, | |
{ name: "Tim", age: 8 } |
public void Configure(IApplicationBuilder app, IHostingEnvironment env, ILoggerFactory loggerFactory) | |
{ | |
app.UseCors(options => options.AllowAnyOrigin().AllowAnyHeader().AllowAnyMethod().AllowCredentials()); | |
loggerFactory.AddConsole(Configuration.GetSection("Logging")); | |
loggerFactory.AddDebug(); | |
app.UseMvc(); | |
} |