Book Image

Hands-On Domain-Driven Design with .NET Core

By : Alexey Zimarev
5 (1)
Book Image

Hands-On Domain-Driven Design with .NET Core

5 (1)
By: Alexey Zimarev

Overview of this book

Developers across the world are rapidly adopting DDD principles to deliver powerful results when writing software that deals with complex business requirements. This book will guide you in involving business stakeholders when choosing the software you are planning to build for them. By figuring out the temporal nature of behavior-driven domain models, you will be able to build leaner, more agile, and modular systems. You’ll begin by uncovering domain complexity and learn how to capture the behavioral aspects of the domain language. You will then learn about EventStorming and advance to creating a new project in .NET Core 2.1; you’ll also and write some code to transfer your events from sticky notes to C#. The book will show you how to use aggregates to handle commands and produce events. As you progress, you’ll get to grips with Bounded Contexts, Context Map, Event Sourcing, and CQRS. After translating domain models into executable C# code, you will create a frontend for your application using Vue.js. In addition to this, you’ll learn how to refactor your code and cover event versioning and migration essentials. By the end of this DDD book, you will have gained the confidence to implement the DDD approach in your organization and be able to explore new techniques that complement what you’ve learned from the book.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)

Transferring the model to code

Since we aren't doing a Hello World exercise, we won't be using the executable project for a while. Instead, we will concentrate on writing things inside the domain project, adding some practical classes and interfaces to the framework projects, and writing tests.

First, we need to identify which building blocks our implementation will be based on. These building blocks are often referenced as Domain-Driven Design (DDD) tactical patterns, as opposed to DDD strategic patterns. Some even say that tactical patterns can be ignored in favor of strategic patterns. Although I agree that Ubiquitous Language, Bounded Context, and Context Map are the essential parts of DDD, I still believe that some tactical patterns are useful and bring clarity and common language for the implementation. This book is not a collection of tactical DDD patterns, and...