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Sponsor: Using RabbitMQ or Azure Service Bus in your .NET systems? Well, you could just use their SDKs and roll your own serialization, routing, outbox, retries, and telemetry. I mean, seriously, how hard could it be?

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Why use MediatR? 3 reasons why and 1 reason not

The MediatR library by Jimmy Bogard has become increasingly popular over recent years, and deservedly so. By its own definition, it’s a simple, unambitious mediator implementation in .NET. Why are so many developers using it? Why should you use MediatR? Here are 3 reasons why you should at least consider using it and one reason why shouldn’t. YouTube Check out my YouTube channel where I post all kinds of content that accompanies my posts including this one regarding MediatR. What is MediatR? For those unfamiliar with MediatR library or the mediator pattern: In software engineering, the mediator pattern defines an object that encapsulates how a… Read More »Why use MediatR? 3 reasons why and 1 reason not

Solution & Project Structure of a Loosely Coupled Monolith

Here’s how you can create a solution and project structure to develop a loosely coupled monolith using a .NET Solution with C# Projects. Each boundary is in a solutions folder with 3 projects. Implementation, Contracts, and Tests. All of which are class libraries. The two top-level executable projects, AspNetCore and Worker are console applications that reference the implementation projects. Loosely Coupled Monolith This blog post is apart of a series of posts I’ve created around Loosely Coupled Monoliths. Loosely Coupled Monolith Overview Thin vs Fat Events YouTube Check out my YouTube channel where I post all kinds of content that… Read More »Solution & Project Structure of a Loosely Coupled Monolith

Migrating to .NET Core: Mission Complete

It’s been over 5 years since I started a greenfield project that initially was developed using Katana/Owin with ASP.NET Web API. Over the past 3 years, since .NET Core 2.0 was released and .NET Standard 2.0 was defined, I’ve been slowly chipping away at migrating to .NET Core. It’s been a long road but we’re now fully migrated and running in production with ASP.NET Core on .NET Core 3.1. Migrating from .NET Framework to .NET Core This blog post is in a series about migrating from .NET Framework to .NET Core. Migrating from .NET Framework to .NET Core Overview Migrating… Read More »Migrating to .NET Core: Mission Complete