Enterprise Application development with JBOSS - Custom for World Bank

PT7761
Training Summary
ASP.NET MVC is a fascinating technology that provides an alternative to Web forms for building Web applications. Instead of building pages using server controls that provide relatively little control over the HTML they produce, MVC gives you complete control. The course starts with an introduction to ASP.NET MVC and the Model-View-Controller pattern on which it is based. You'll learn about the main differences between MVC and Web forms applications, and see how to build a simple MVC application with Visual Studio. Then you'll explore each of the three main components of an MVC application. Next, you'll explore models, which encapsulate the data and business rules of an application. You'll learn that there are almost no limitations in how you provide data to an MVC application. Then you'll get into views, the user interface of an MVC application. Then you'll get into views, the user interface of an MVC application. You'll then move on to HTML Helpers and Action Filters where you'll also learn about custom helpers and filters. Routing and URLs are the next subjects where you'll see how to create route constraints and other items. In the next section you'll be introduced to AJAX and jQuery libraries and how to use them with MVC. In the last section of the course you'll see the upcoming enhancements for MVC 3.0.
Prerequisites
This course assumes that you are familiar and experienced with Microsoft's .NET Framework and ASP.NET development tools. You should be familiar with Web development and understand how HTTP and HTML work to produce Web pages for the user. You should have experience writing applications with ASP.NET 3.5 or later Web forms, and be familiar with how ASP.NET processes page requests, and have strong experience with .NET Framework 3.5 or later programming. You should have experience with Visual Studio 2008 or later for building Web application projects. Experience with building database applications using these tools will be helpful, although not strictly necessary.
Duration
4 Hours/ Lecture & Lab
Course Topics
  • The Model-View-Controller Pattern
  • Using a Controller to Manage the Application
  • Data and Business Rules in MVC Applications
  • Views in ASP.NET MVC
  • Using HTML Helpers in MVC
  • Customizing Application URLs
  • Introducing the AJAX and jQuery Libraries
  • New Features that Build on Old Libraries

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