visual studio
41 TopicsLive in 21 hours June 29 at 11:00 AM Notify me Let's Learn .NET - Web Development
Learn the basics of web development by writing HTML and CSS code to create an accessible webpage using the browser-based version of Visual Studio Code. Then build your first webpage using Razor with ASP.NET Core. Come to learn something new and leave with something that we all built, together, live with experts! Resource links: https://aka.ms/letslearndotnet-webdev https://github.com/dotnet/intro-to-dotnet-web-dev Web Dev Around the World Series https://aka.ms/letslearndotnet Featuring: Cam Soper (@camsoper), Jayme Singleton (@jaymesingleton1) #VSCode #AspNetCore #Razor #dotnet298Views0likes0CommentsAzure Developers - .NET Day 2023
Experience Cloud Computing in Full Force with .NET on Azure. See the full agenda: https://learn.microsoft.com/events/learn-events/azuredeveloper-dotnetday/ As a .NET developer building for the cloud, do you want to stay ahead of the curve and maximize your potential? Join us to discover the latest services and features in Azure designed specifically for .NET developers. You'll learn cutting-edge cloud development techniques that can save you time and money, while providing your customers with the best experience possible. During the event, you'll hear directly from the experts behind the most sought-after cloud services for developers, spanning app development/compute, data services, serverless computing, cloud-native computing, and developer productivity. Don't miss this chance to participate and engage with the team throughout the day. Join us and take your cloud development skills to the next level! #azure #azuredevelopers #azurefunctions #azurecontainerapps #azuredevcli1.4KViews0likes0CommentsASP.NET Community Standup - Dev tunnels in Visual Studio for ASP.NET Core projects
The dev tunnels feature of Visual Studio 2022 enables ad-hoc connections between machines that can't directly connect to each other. A URL is created that enables any device with an internet connection to connect to an ASP.NET Core project while it runs on localhost. Come join the team for an update on new features in dev tunnels for ASP.NET Core developers, including: - Support for persistent and temporary tunnels - Create and use tunnels with different accounts. - UI to create and manage dev tunnels. - UI to easily select the active tunnel to be used. - No longer uses properties in launchSettings.json600Views0likes0CommentsBuilding OSS projects with C# and .NET
Register: https://developer.microsoft.com/reactor/eventregistration/register/14996 Join us on Thursday December 2nd for an engaging discussion with contributors to open-source software (OSS) projects being built and maintained in C# and .NET. Led by Claire Novotny, our event host and Senior Program Manager on the .NET team at Microsoft, this conversation-style event will feature contributors from two OSS projects: Andres Pineda from Uno Platform and David Paquette from Humanitarian Toolbox. https://github.com/unoplatform https://github.com/htbox You’ll learn about the goals and status of these OSS projects, dive into the technology used to build and maintain them while relying on a distributed team of developers, and discover some lessons learned from experiences contributing to the creation of open-source software. Do you have any questions for the group to address during this conversation? Please use this form to submit your questions before midnight PT on Tuesday November 30: https://aka.ms/OSSQuestions Speakers: Claire Novotny, Senior Program Manager at Microsoft Andres Pineda, Senior Software Engineer at Shopify Andres is a Software Developer with a passion for Mobile Technologies. He is part of different developer communities where he collaborates in different ways (coding, mentoring, hosting events, speaking, etc). In his free time, he enjoys working out, playing a video game, or just chilling out watching a tv show. David Paquette, Senior Software Engineer at Microsoft3.5KViews0likes0CommentsBuilding mobile apps using .NET MAUI | #SamosaChai.NET
.NET Multi-platform App UI (.NET MAUI) is a cross-platform framework for creating native mobile and desktop apps with C# and XAML. Using .NET MAUI, you can develop apps that can run on Android, iOS, macOS, and Windows from a single shared code-base. This session will cover all that you need to know about MAUI. Register -> https://developer.microsoft.com/reactor/eventregistration/register/14850 To learn more about .NET, follow the links below: https://aka.ms/1LearnModule-SamosaChai.NET https://aka.ms/2LearnModule-SamosaChai.NET Guest Speaker: James Montemagno James Montemagno is a Principal Lead Program Manager for .NET Community at Microsoft. He has been a .NET developer since 2005, working in a wide range of industries including game development, printer software, and web services. Prior to becoming a Principal Program Manager, James was a professional mobile developer and has now been crafting apps since 2011 with Xamarin. In his spare time, he is most likely cycling around Seattle or guzzling gallons of coffee at a local coffee shop. Social Handles Twitter- https://twitter.com/JamesMontemagno Blog- http://www.montemagno.com Podcast- http://mergeconflict.fm Speaker info: Nish Anil Nish is a Program Manager on the .NET Community team at Microsoft. He helps developers build production-ready apps with .NET and maintains the popular Architecture reference guides @ dot.net/architecture. Social Handle Twitter - https://twitter.com/nishanil Speaker info: Vivek Sridhar Vivek Sridhar is a technophile and an Open-Source contributor with around 15 years of experience in the Software Industry and works at Microsoft as Senior Cloud Advocate. In his previous role, he has mentored startups/developers, speaker at conferences/meetups for DigitalOcean as Senior Developer Advocate, Co-Founder / Chief-Architect of NoodleNext Technology. He was also heading DevOps and QA at BlackBuck and was a DevOps Solution Architect at HCL (Australia) in client engagement. Vivek started his career with IBM Rational (India Software Labs) as a Software Developer. Social Handle Twitter - https://twitter.com/vivek_sridhar530Views0likes0CommentsBlazor – Next Gen UI with .NET 6 | #SamosaChai.NET
Blazor lets you build interactive web UIs using C# instead of JavaScript. Blazor apps are composed of reusable web UI components implemented using C#, HTML, and CSS. Both client and server code are written in C#, allowing you to share code and libraries. Together, we will learn all about Blazor and why you would use it to build web apps, and then we will build our first client web app with Blazor and .NET. Register -> https://developer.microsoft.com/reactor/eventregistration/register/14957 Guest Speaker Info: Jeff Fritz Jeff is the managing partner and founder of The Live Coders stream team on Twitch. He writes code and hosts a live video program 4 days a week, teaching developers with his own brand of entertainment. With the Live Coders team, he has taken his extensive community management and event planning experience and produced the most viewed online 1-day technical event on Twitch, the Live Coders Conf. Jeff is also a Principal Program Manager for the .NET and Visual Studio teams at Microsoft. He writes workshops, presentations, and plans content for the largest Microsoft developer events including Microsoft Build, Microsoft Ignite, .NET Conf, and the Microsoft MVP Summit. Social Handle LinkedIn- https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeffreytfritz/ Speaker info: Nish Anil Nish is a Program Manager on the .NET Community team at Microsoft. He helps developers build production-ready apps with .NET and maintains the popular Architecture reference guides @ dot.net/architecture. Social Handle Twitter - https://twitter.com/nishanil Speaker info: Vivek Sridhar Vivek Sridhar is a technophile and an Open-Source contributor with around 15 years of experience in the Software Industry and works at Microsoft as Senior Cloud Advocate. In his previous role, he has mentored startups/developers, speaker at conferences/meetups for DigitalOcean as Senior Developer Advocate, Co-Founder / Chief-Architect of NoodleNext Technology. He was also heading DevOps and QA at BlackBuck and was a DevOps Solution Architect at HCL (Australia) in client engagement. Vivek started his career with IBM Rational (India Software Labs) as a Software Developer. Social Handle Twitter - https://twitter.com/vivek_sridhar1.2KViews0likes0Comments.NET Conf 2021
.NET Conf is a free, three-day, virtual developer event that celebrates the major releases of the .NET development platform. It is co-organized by the .NET community and Microsoft, and sponsored by the .NET Foundation and our ecosystem partners. Come celebrate and learn about what you can do with .NET 6. Checkout the full schedule at https://www.dotnetconf.net/agenda Day 1 - November 9 Day one is all about the big news, .NET 6! Join the .NET team on all the new things you can do with the latest release. 8:00 - 9:00 Keynote with Scott Hunter and members of the .NET team 9:00 - 17:00 Sessions from the .NET teams at Microsoft 17:00 - 19:00 Virtual Attendee Party (CodeParty #1). Have fun and win prizes from our sponsors. Day 2 - November 10 Day two is where we dive deeper into all the things you can do with .NET and our 24 hour broadcast begins with community speakers around the world. 7:00 - 9:00 Virtual Attendee Party (CodeParty #2). Have fun and win prizes from our sponsors. 9:00 - 17:00 Sessions from teams all around Microsoft 17:00 - 23:59 Community sessions in local time zones around the world Day 3 - November 11 Day three continues our all day and night broadcast with speakers around the world in their own time zones. 0:00 - 17:00 Community sessions in local time zones around the world1.2KViews2likes1CommentIs it possible for the dotnet command to not publish some files?
I've received an unusual request from some users of an ASP.NET Core app. I'm using the dotnet command to clean and publish the solution, to a server in our network, using a GitHub self-hosted runner on another server. They don't want the dotnet command to publish the "appsettings.json" and "appsettings.Developer.json" files. Is there a way of preventing dotnet from publishing some files? Here's the code snippet I'm using from the YAML file: - name: Clean build run: dotnet clean $env:Solution_Name - name: Publish app run: dotnet publish -c Release $env:Solution_Name /p:PublishProfile=VaccineRegDevProfile208Views0likes0Comments