AspNetCore.Docs/aspnetcore/index.md

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Introduction to ASP.NET Core | Microsoft Docs rick-anderson ASP.NET Core, riande wpickett 10/14/2016 article 1c501638-114a-4cd3-ad39-0a5790b4e764 aspnet asp.net-core index

Introduction to ASP.NET Core

By Daniel Roth, Rick Anderson, and Shaun Luttin

ASP.NET Core is a significant redesign of ASP.NET. This topic introduces the new concepts in ASP.NET Core and explains how they help you develop modern web apps.

What is ASP.NET Core?

ASP.NET Core is a new open-source and cross-platform framework for building modern cloud based internet connected applications, such as web apps, IoT apps and mobile backends. ASP.NET Core apps can run on .NET Core or on the full .NET Framework. It was architected to provide an optimized development framework for apps that are deployed to the cloud or run on-premises. It consists of modular components with minimal overhead, so you retain flexibility while constructing your solutions. You can develop and run your ASP.NET Core apps cross-platform on Windows, Mac and Linux. ASP.NET Core is open source at GitHub.

Why build ASP.NET Core?

The first preview release of ASP.NET came out almost 15 years ago as part of the .NET Framework. Since then millions of developers have used it to build and run great web apps, and over the years we have added and evolved many capabilities to it.

ASP.NET Core has a number of architectural changes that result in a much leaner and modular framework. ASP.NET Core is no longer based on System.Web.dll. It is based on a set of granular and well factored NuGet packages. This allows you to optimize your app to include just the NuGet packages you need. The benefits of a smaller app surface area include tighter security, reduced servicing, improved performance, and decreased costs in a pay-for-what-you-use model.

With ASP.NET Core you gain the following foundational improvements:

  • A unified story for building web UI and web APIs

  • Integration of modern client-side frameworks and development workflows

  • A cloud-ready environment-based configuration system

  • Built-in dependency injection

  • New light-weight and modular HTTP request pipeline

  • Ability to host on IIS or self-host in your own process

  • Built on .NET Core, which supports true side-by-side app versioning

  • Ships entirely as NuGet packages

  • New tooling that simplifies modern web development

  • Build and run cross-platform ASP.NET apps on Windows, Mac and Linux

  • Open source and community focused

Build web APIs and web UI using ASP.NET Core MVC

  • You can build HTTP services that reach a broad range of clients, including browsers and mobile devices. Support for multiple data formats and content negotiation is built-in. ASP.NET Core is an ideal platform for building web APIs and RESTful apps on .NET Core. See Building web APIs.

  • You can create well-factored and testable web apps that follow the Model-View-Controller (MVC) pattern. See MVC and Testing.

  • Razor provides a productive language to create Views

  • Tag Helpers enable server-side code to participate in creating and rendering HTML elements in Razor files

  • Model Binding automatically maps data from HTTP requests to action method parameters

  • Model Validation automatically performs client and server side validation

Client-side development

ASP.NET Core is designed to integrate seamlessly with a variety of client-side frameworks, including AngularJS, KnockoutJS and Bootstrap. See Client-Side Development for more details.

Next steps

For getting-started tutorials, see ASP.NET Core Tutorials

For in-depth introduction to ASP.NET Core concepts and architecture, see ASP.NET Core Fundamentals.

An ASP.NET Core app can use the .NET Core or .NET Framework runtime. For more information, see Choosing between .NET Core and .NET Framework.

If youd like to connect with the ASP.NET Core development teams progress and plans, tune in to the weekly ASP.NET Community Standup.