.NET Community Meetup 29/10

We will be glad to meet online at the .NET Community meetup . Join us on October 29 to communicate and discuss: we will touch upon the design and use of an asynchronous Success / Failure pipeline in microservices and dive into the history of programming languages ​​- what did the authors of C # borrow from people we don't even know about?



See you online!







What are we going to talk about



Asynchronous Result Flow for .NET

Andrey Sergeev, Raiffeisenbank



About the speaker:Andrey is a software developer. He is engaged in the design and development of back-end platforms and products, focusing on the design of architectural layers and the connections between them: from the core, the engine - the technical foundation, to the levels that implement object tasks in higher terms, and further to the end points (external contracts). Uses the current .NET Core and C #, applying as the main functional approach - from the use of language constructs and the principle of composition to the organization of layers in microservices and then flows between services; at the same time, enriching development approaches with the results of analysis of related and / or competing tools (F #, Java, Kotlin, Ruby, etc.) and principles (for example, dynamic typing). At the same time, focusing on the current tools, proceeds from the primacy of the principles,which are then realized with the help of certain means.



About the talk: design and use of an asynchronous Success / Failure pipeline in microservices, taking into account the peculiarities of the implementation of asynchronous computations in C # and .NET.




History of programming languages ​​for those who write in C #

Mark Shevchenko



About the speaker: Programmer and team lead. In his free time he organizes meetings of the Moscow Programmers Club.

As part of the club work, he helps programmers to make interesting reports and write good articles. At his main job, he supervises a small team of specialists. Shows how to write simple code, cover it with tests, use design patterns, and apply SOLID principles. Understands Dependency Injection and Domain-Driven Design. He makes reports, writes articles, teaches programming courses.



About the report:It's obvious to us that C # is a good programming language. You look at how wonderful the authors have designed it, and your heart rejoices! However, digging deeper, you understand that the authors borrowed some ideas from people about whom we do not even know, and these ideas are decades old. Let's explore the history of programming languages. Let's see what worried programmers in the past, and how it affected the modern world.



>> Let's start the meetup at 19:00 MSK.

Register to receive a link to the broadcast : a letter with a link will be sent to your mail. We are waiting for you!



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