.Net

Buzzword Buster – AOP

Definition: Aspect Oriented Programming (AOP) is a programming paradigm where each application can focus on its primary functions and core concerns by encouraging greater modularity and increasing separation of cross-cutting concerns (such as logging and authentication). Purpose: In any real-world applications, when you’re writing code to address the problem domain (say, booking an order) you …

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Buzzword Buster – Cross-Cutting Concern

Definition: A Cross-Cutting Concern is a concern your application needs to address that is unrelated to your application’s problem domain, and ‘cuts across’ other concerns. Typical examples include: logging persistence security error handling They are usually difficult to decompose from the rest of the system and result in tangled code. Addressing these cross-cutting concerns will …

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Testing with Pex

Some time ago I read about (might be on DotNetRocks) a little gem coming out of Microsoft’s research lab called Pex, which is a framework for doing automated White Box Testing in .Net. It’s still in its early days (despite having been around for more than 2 years now) but packs a bag of potential …

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