#cslanet — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #cslanet, aggregated by home.social.
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#cslanet version 10.1.0 is online. Big features: new `BusinessDocumentBase` base class and #wcf data portal channel.
https://github.com/MarimerLLC/csla/blob/125b7a858051f2ffdafe237a8a0c76a1dbb1f980/releasenotes.md
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#cslanet version 10.1.0 is online. Big features: new `BusinessDocumentBase` base class and #wcf data portal channel.
https://github.com/MarimerLLC/csla/blob/125b7a858051f2ffdafe237a8a0c76a1dbb1f980/releasenotes.md
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#cslanet version 10.1.0 is online. Big features: new `BusinessDocumentBase` base class and #wcf data portal channel.
https://github.com/MarimerLLC/csla/blob/125b7a858051f2ffdafe237a8a0c76a1dbb1f980/releasenotes.md
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#cslanet version 10.1.0 is online. Big features: new `BusinessDocumentBase` base class and #wcf data portal channel.
https://github.com/MarimerLLC/csla/blob/125b7a858051f2ffdafe237a8a0c76a1dbb1f980/releasenotes.md
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#cslanet version 10.1.0 is online. Big features: new `BusinessDocumentBase` base class and #wcf data portal channel.
https://github.com/MarimerLLC/csla/blob/125b7a858051f2ffdafe237a8a0c76a1dbb1f980/releasenotes.md
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@Kissaki @SmartmanApps More accurately, #netstandard is the bridge between #netfx and #dotnet. It was a cross-platform thing when #xamarin and #uwp were viable, but today it is really just a migration bridge.
We use it a lot in #cslanet for example, because we support everything from #netfx 4.6.2 onwards.
For most mainstream developers though, this is all just background noise.
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#cslanet 8 on #dotnetrocks - great conversation with @carlfranklin and @richcampbell
https://www.spreaker.com/episode/csla-8-with-rocky-lhotka--58772303
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This was a timely interview, as someone recently started a thread in the #cslanet forum about #CleanArchitecture, #MediatR, and #VSA
All of these things have come into being during the lifetime of #cslanet (27+ years is a long time), and it is interesting to do a compare/contrast with these "newcomer" ideas😁
Being a long-time advocate of object-oriented design around user scenarios (use cases), the idea of vertical slices for functionality makes a lot of sense to me.
1/🧵