How To Upgrade a .NET Core 3.1 project to .NET 6.0
.NET is 20 years old this week and I’ve been using it for a big chunk of that. It’s come a long way since the early days when I started and is now cross-platform. »
.NET is 20 years old this week and I’ve been using it for a big chunk of that. It’s come a long way since the early days when I started and is now cross-platform. »
Huxley 2, my cross-platform .NET JSON proxy for the GB railway Live Departure Boards SOAP API, has some new updates. You can try it out now on the demo server. »
Another year, another .NET release. .NET 6 is now out and although it contains some new features, the main things I think are significant are the continued push for high performance and that it is an LTS release. »
.NET 5 is out on schedule (but with a reduced scope). The Core branding has gone but it’s the same modern cross-platform codebase and not the old Windows-only Framework. »
There is a new preview version of .NET Core 3.0 out (preview 5) and I’ve been giving it a kick like I did the last one. »
Visual Studio 2019 has been released for Windows and macOS. However, .NET Core 3.0 and C# 8 are still in preview, coming later this year. »
ASP.NET Core 2.2 is out, in time for some holiday projects. This looks to be mainly a performance release, which is great. »
Just in time for summer (at least for those of us in the northern hemisphere), there is a new minor release of ASP. »