20 Nuget packages that every .NET developer should be familiar with

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  • čas přidán 15. 06. 2024
  • Become a Patreon and get source code access: / nickchapsas
    Check out my courses: dometrain.com
    Hello everybody I'm Nick and in this video I will talk about the 20 Nuget which I think that every .NET developer should be familiar with in 2021. These nuget packages can be seen in a wide collection of popular projects and you will definately encounter them during your career as a .NET software engineer.
    The packages:
    0:00 Introduction
    0:57 xUnit & NUnit
    2:14 Moq & NSubstitute
    3:19 Polly
    4:12 FluentAssertions
    5:17 BenchmarkDotNet
    5:53 Serilog
    6:37 Autofixture & Bogus
    7:40 Scrutor
    9:22 Automapper
    10:09 Dapper & Entity Framework Core
    11:32 MediatR & Brighter
    12:37 FluentValidation
    13:17 Refit & RestSharp
    14:08 Json.NET
    Don't forget to comment, like and subscribe :)
    Social Media:
    Follow me on GitHub: bit.ly/ChapsasGitHub
    Follow me on Twitter: bit.ly/ChapsasTwitter
    Connect on LinkedIn: bit.ly/ChapsasLinkedIn
    #nuget #dotnet

Komentáře • 118

  • @jarekmag6291
    @jarekmag6291 Před 3 lety +38

    My dumb ass reading the title, at first glance thought it's about McDonald's Chicken Nuggets 20 pieces

  • @DanteDeRuwe
    @DanteDeRuwe Před 3 lety +2

    Nice compilation of a lot of packages you showcased already! Keep it up!

  • @0blit
    @0blit Před 3 lety +146

    I'd probably add Swagger/Swashbuckle to the list of essentials, but great list otherwise.

    • @carlosjosejimenezbermudez9255
      @carlosjosejimenezbermudez9255 Před 3 lety +10

      I'd replace Automapper with that instead, it seems to me it causes more problems than it fixes and few understand it properly when it fails. Turning plain and simple mapping into a difficult to debug mess.

    • @EbrahimAlkadim
      @EbrahimAlkadim Před 3 lety +25

      Since .NET Core 5 (.NET 5) Swagger is now built-in by default .

    • @randyriegel8553
      @randyriegel8553 Před 3 lety

      @@EbrahimAlkadim and with .NET 5 you actually create a dependency service using the json file created by swagger.... then just add that reference to your project... It can all the API calls for you from the generated code. So in client you already have methods to call the API.

  • @adamsiarkowski7635
    @adamsiarkowski7635 Před 3 lety +2

    Hi Nick 👍 Thanks for a great content as always 👍👍👍

  • @amjster
    @amjster Před 3 lety

    Many thanks Nick, a superb video providing balanced opinion on a lot of very useful packages. Thank you for introducing me to Polly...

  • @leandrowitzke6405
    @leandrowitzke6405 Před 3 lety +1

    Love it !! Nice video dude, thanks.

  • @augustinomateso5568
    @augustinomateso5568 Před 3 lety +6

    Nice video, really helpful. For .NET Framework I will add ELMAH, HangFire and Autofac

  • @DanielTames
    @DanielTames Před 2 lety

    great video man! thanks a lot!

  • @chyldstudios
    @chyldstudios Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the list.

  • @seanfarrow3538
    @seanfarrow3538 Před 2 lety +13

    I'm really surprised Noda Time hasn't had a mention. A really good package for allowing dates/times to be tested. It also makes you think about what sort of a date/time you have, UTC, a local date/time or one in another Time zone.

  • @federicoeslava6696
    @federicoeslava6696 Před 2 lety

    Great video. Thanks

  • @markobottger5706
    @markobottger5706 Před 3 lety

    Great video!

  • @sergiooliveira4338
    @sergiooliveira4338 Před 3 lety +1

    I've used almost one of each kind of nugets you talked about, thats awesome..
    I would like to see a video about MSBuild.. But compiling a project programaticly..

  • @sundeliu3324
    @sundeliu3324 Před 3 lety

    Thx This is useful.

  • @coderider3022
    @coderider3022 Před rokem

    Good list. I used most of these in projects. Autofac is a must.

  • @L0RDeX
    @L0RDeX Před 3 lety +12

    I'd like to add Roslyn code analyzer and styleCop.

  • @kostasgkoutis8534
    @kostasgkoutis8534 Před 3 lety +2

    Awesome!

  • @philipmrch8326
    @philipmrch8326 Před rokem

    I'm happy that I already know most of these

  • @calvinwilson3617
    @calvinwilson3617 Před 3 lety +3

    I dislike using full ef, however it can be nice to quickly reverse engineer the sql db model into c# using the dotnet ef cli commands, especially when combined with the validation abstraction decorations. It allows you to quickly get the exact models and validation. I would not use those models directly however you can extend those and add whatever alterations you want.

  • @adammusson2874
    @adammusson2874 Před 3 lety +3

    I'd add Respawn by Jimmy Bogard for setting up test data for unit tests but Great list!

  • @damiansuess
    @damiansuess Před 3 lety +1

    Great rundown! it's nice to get a refresher on what is out there.
    Just curious, which program do you use to edit your videos?

  • @LukeAvedon
    @LukeAvedon Před 3 lety +6

    Wow. That advice about dapper and entity framework is gold!

    • @dwilliams8649
      @dwilliams8649 Před rokem

      Yeah, I've done it the opposite way as well... where I would use EF with track changes turn off and used dapper with stored procs for my writes. I am not a big fan of putting business logic in stored procs, but in some cases it just makes sense from a performance standpoint.

  • @alexandremaciel4520
    @alexandremaciel4520 Před 3 lety

    Yeah, you are talking about MSTest. I used it quite a lot with dotnet web APIs on V 4.5

  • @chbasitgill1
    @chbasitgill1 Před 3 lety +1

    👍👍👍👍👍👍 nice mate.

  • @AlfredoPinto
    @AlfredoPinto Před 3 lety

    I use dapper and entity framework, please include a review for RepoDB, is an excellent ORM in the middle

  • @lekabros
    @lekabros Před 3 lety +16

    I see Nick upload, I click like.

  • @adesokantayyib3445
    @adesokantayyib3445 Před 3 lety +2

    Hi Nick, please can you do a tutorial on Custom Webhooks.

  • @husreihn1070
    @husreihn1070 Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you for your hard work, however, I still wished you added atleast one example on how to use it and showcase the use of it.

  • @dilipnettyfish1939
    @dilipnettyfish1939 Před 3 lety +3

    Swagger Nuget should be added in your list!

  • @pritishranjan
    @pritishranjan Před 3 lety +4

    Can you please explain a bit How and When to use Dapper and EFCore as you mentioned reads and writes.

    • @Kwod120
      @Kwod120 Před 3 lety

      +1

    • @juankar008
      @juankar008 Před 3 lety +1

      Dapper is faster for reads than EFCore and for writes they are similar

    • @pritishranjan
      @pritishranjan Před 3 lety +1

      @@juankar008 So for every read should we use Stored procedure always or for Complex reads with joins and stuff...

    • @coderider3022
      @coderider3022 Před rokem

      I left efcore behind with the monoliths and db intensive apps. I’m focused on small micro services and use dapper and never looked back.

  • @Sergio_Loureiro
    @Sergio_Loureiro Před měsícem

    Can you do a video about whether at this time RestSharp is still relevant compared to the actual encarnation of the native .Net HttpClient? Tks in advance.

  • @shreyasjejurkar1233
    @shreyasjejurkar1233 Před 3 lety +3

    I wonder why MS won't optimize Json.NET internals directly (without breaking public API) to take advantage of Span Family API and reduce allocations. There might be 2 reason which I can think.
    1. MS don't want to optimize 3rd party libraries (although the author Newtonsoft works at MS)
    2. Or Newtonsoft didn't give the permission to do so!? 😅😅

    • @nickchapsas
      @nickchapsas  Před 3 lety +4

      I think that they have said that already. Can't find the blog. Basically that's what they wanted to do originally but as they tried to do so it was so hard to optimize without making any breaking changes that they dropped the idea. It also has to do with how many projects use it. If they were to break something in the process or cause a memory leak or whatever, they would bascically harm every single .net project.

    • @shreyasjejurkar1233
      @shreyasjejurkar1233 Před 3 lety

      @@nickchapsas Breaking change that is OK for .NET Core. I mean just get a clone of Json.NET into dotnet runtime (if wanted rename it to System.Text.Json) and optimize its internal for performance! So this way, it will have all features + Perf improvements.

    • @titol6
      @titol6 Před 3 lety +1

      @@shreyasjejurkar1233 Sometimes it's better to start project from scratch.

    • @shreyasjejurkar1233
      @shreyasjejurkar1233 Před 3 lety

      @@titol6 I don't think so when I look at such a mature library like Json.NET. And also the author of library works at Microsoft, so that shouldn't be the problem from my point of view!

    • @titol6
      @titol6 Před 3 lety

      @@shreyasjejurkar1233 Here you have all the explanations @Nick was talking about:
      devblogs.microsoft.com/dotnet/try-the-new-system-text-json-apis/

  • @mohamedchaabouni3027
    @mohamedchaabouni3027 Před 3 lety

    Hello !
    I have a question. I want to execute Javascript (node.js) code on a Web API REST Call (C#). Can I use IJSRuntime ? or it isn't a good practice ? and if so, Is there an alternative to run Javascript code on the back-end side.
    My app have 2 Parts (backend and a front end app) not a Blazor app.

    • @vitaly062
      @vitaly062 Před 3 lety

      There is node.js for running JS on the server-side. So you already have .Net app, then you need to run node.js app and all what you need is just think about channel which you will use to trigger node.js functions from your .Net app (it might be HTTP, message queue, whatever)

  • @pilotboba
    @pilotboba Před 3 lety +2

    BouncyCastle for any Cryptograpic stuff you want to do.

  • @rbogdan8980
    @rbogdan8980 Před 3 lety +3

    Nuget - AspNetCoreRateLimit

  • @AizenSousuke92
    @AizenSousuke92 Před 3 lety

    any good model binder for webforms?

  • @tony-ma
    @tony-ma Před 3 lety

    Hi Nick have you used messtransit package? Will you make a video on it?

    • @nickchapsas
      @nickchapsas  Před 3 lety +1

      I know of MassTransit and I will be making a video about it

    • @tony-ma
      @tony-ma Před 3 lety

      @@nickchapsas awesome looking forward to it

    • @coderider3022
      @coderider3022 Před rokem +1

      Masstransit is very hard to get working and very opinionated, it’s not easy to get going. Brighter I think is a better starter package. I would use nservicebus if my company could afford it.

  • @vredurs
    @vredurs Před 3 lety +1

    What about Noda Time? Or are the date/calendar apis on pair in .net core?

    • @nickchapsas
      @nickchapsas  Před 3 lety +1

      I think in 5 years if seen NodaTime once and that one service was doing some time specific things. It’s pretty cool but I wouldn’t put it under a “must know”

    •  Před 2 lety

      @@nickchapsas I would recommend NodaTime in every project instead of BCL DateTime because it has a proper abstraction for date, time, time zones, etc. Even if you don't need advanced date time arithmetic you would use proper abstractions.

  • @davidstowell692
    @davidstowell692 Před 2 lety

    Very tangentially, I noticed that you are using a Rode NT1-A mic - in addition to software development, I'm also a music producer and think very highly of that model of mic.

  • @NawfalHasan
    @NawfalHasan Před 2 lety +3

    I am surprised you missed Autofac and Humanizr.

  • @benlewies8828
    @benlewies8828 Před 3 lety

    Honestly, I haven't heard of either Refit or RestSharp. I have seen NSwag been used a lot (however, I'm not really a big fan).

  • @lamboiah
    @lamboiah Před 2 lety +1

    Very useful info but more for persons already familiar with the packages. Not enough mention of what they actually do, at least for newbies

  • @yourpotatoking
    @yourpotatoking Před 3 lety

    You are not the only big brian in the town. I use arch linux btw.

  • @tumelomotsikelane
    @tumelomotsikelane Před 3 lety

    What about using RepoDB? It is said to be a good combination of EF Core and Dapper 🤔

    • @nickchapsas
      @nickchapsas  Před 3 lety +5

      This certainly looks interesting, I wasn't aware of it. That being said it wouldn't make the list even if I did, at least not the 2021 list. A project needs to be mature, stable and widely used before it can make my "top 20 nuget packages list"

    • @tumelomotsikelane
      @tumelomotsikelane Před 3 lety +1

      @@nickchapsas I agree. It really is less mature

  • @MilanDendis
    @MilanDendis Před 3 lety +1

    maybe RepoDB as an alternative to Dapper, EF

  • @Eugene.g
    @Eugene.g Před 3 lety

    👍

  • @BittermanAndy
    @BittermanAndy Před 3 lety +6

    JetBrains Annotations is the obvious one missing, first package I add to just about every project I ever make. Log4NET at least worthy of mention next to Serilog too.
    On a separate note, can we please all agree that anything that depends on coding by convention should die in a fire? It's not discoverable, the only way to know it is to know it already, which means it's just more cruft and guff to learn before you can do anything productive. The worst fad in the last two decades.

  • @daa82
    @daa82 Před 2 lety

    I’d recommend Castle.Windsor

    • @coderider3022
      @coderider3022 Před rokem

      Too old, I used it in an old app. Autofac is way to go

    • @daa82
      @daa82 Před rokem

      @@coderider3022 seems very similar to castle Windsor. What is the difference?

    • @coderider3022
      @coderider3022 Před rokem

      @@daa82 you should stick to the latest stuff not the older tech, need to keep your skills up to date and go with industry. Microsoft or autofac is what you see in projects and online. "Good" or "better" unfortunately doesnt apply in software.

  • @migsteele
    @migsteele Před 3 lety +2

    Fluent assertions ftw

  • @tomaszkrupa1369
    @tomaszkrupa1369 Před 3 lety

    When it comes to creating http clients, try RestEase

    • @nickchapsas
      @nickchapsas  Před 3 lety +2

      It looks like it does the same thing that Refit does. Am I missing something?
      Edit: It actually does mention that it is inspired by Refit

  • @ericvosselmans5657
    @ericvosselmans5657 Před 2 lety

    what happend to Fody?

  • @PerryCodes
    @PerryCodes Před 2 lety

    3:50 Is anyone actually seeing a link here?

  • @lasindunuwanga5292
    @lasindunuwanga5292 Před 3 lety

    Well i love EF
    It makes things super easy and save time a lot from making models

  • @jfpinero
    @jfpinero Před 3 lety +3

    No love for Flurl instead of maybe Refit? Can't go wrong with fluent coding with stuff like await "api.com".GetAsync()

  • @Punkologist
    @Punkologist Před 2 lety

    I have used a lot of these, but far too many I haven't

  • @wangengzheng8931
    @wangengzheng8931 Před 3 lety

    can show list in comment

  • @VJPaz
    @VJPaz Před 3 lety +4

    Why Json.net not newtonsoft.json?

    • @damianrecinski7329
      @damianrecinski7329 Před 2 lety

      Isn't that the same?

    • @VJPaz
      @VJPaz Před 2 lety

      @@damianrecinski7329 nope, they are different

    • @damianrecinski7329
      @damianrecinski7329 Před 2 lety

      @@VJPaz I don't think so. Even if you go to json.net, you are navigated to newtonsoft.json

  • @mwi1536
    @mwi1536 Před 3 lety

    For http clients try flurl

    • @nickchapsas
      @nickchapsas  Před 3 lety +2

      I've actually used it in production and I really quickly changed it to Refit. It's cool but i think that Refit is cooler :D

    • @mwi1536
      @mwi1536 Před 3 lety

      @@nickchapsas Next time i will give Refit a try

  • @nedbog
    @nedbog Před 3 lety +1

    We use fakeiteasy, it is nice

  • @infartk
    @infartk Před 2 lety

    automapper used by junior devs, antipattern for OOP principles.

  • @SmileyEmoji42
    @SmileyEmoji42 Před 3 lety

    Everywhere I go I find log4net

  • @adriancooke7310
    @adriancooke7310 Před 3 lety

    Respawn... Jimmy Bogard

  • @nickfotopoulos5323
    @nickfotopoulos5323 Před 3 lety

    READ....READ 🤭

  • @SylvanFeanturi
    @SylvanFeanturi Před 3 lety +1

    Interesting list. Most are a safe bet for projects, too, or a good start to look for something that fit the particular use-case better. I don't think Serilog should be on the list, but that's more a personal preference than anything else.
    That said, thumbs down for suggesting using two ORMs at once instead of just learning SQL. That's just lazy.

    • @nickchapsas
      @nickchapsas  Před 3 lety +6

      I disagree. It’s not lazy, it’s efficient. Why would I spend time learning something in depth that I really don’t need to? It’s actually been 4 years since I used an RDBMS professionally at all but when I have to Dapper and EF give pretty much the exact same results without me having to be good at SQL. It’s an absolute win

    • @rahulj2167
      @rahulj2167 Před 3 lety +3

      thumbs down for not understanding micro orm. Dapper works on SQL queries. Even in entity framework its possible to use plain SQL queries.

    • @restveggie6155
      @restveggie6155 Před 3 lety

      @@rahulj2167 agree. Knowing sql is a must when it comes down to Sql optimisation. Developer needs to know execution plan more or less. Some times orm spits urgly query lowering performance, that’s when raw Sql comes in handy.

    • @rahulj2167
      @rahulj2167 Před 3 lety

      @@restveggie6155 Yes. My point was there is no harm in including Dapper, EF under tools for a .Net developer to get familiar with. Each has its use cases.

    • @cascadengineering
      @cascadengineering Před 3 lety +1

      Thumbs down for not knowing that Dapper is not an ORM.

  • @hrchavz9694
    @hrchavz9694 Před 2 lety

    too sad when you only speak in front the camera

  • @GussDavey
    @GussDavey Před 3 lety +2

    :-) bla bla bla