Introduction
ASP.NET has travelled a long way through evolutions. Earlier when ASP.NET 1.0 was released as part of .NET Framework 1.0 in Jan 2002, there was only ASP.NET – a framework for building dynamic web applications and it provided lots of flexibility web developers in building robust, dynamic web applications. ASP.NET was and is the successor to Microsoft’s Active Server Pages (ASP) technology.
ASP.NET is built on the Common Language Runtime (CLR), allowing programmers to write ASP.NET code using any supported .NET language. The ASP.NET SOAP extension framework allows ASP.NET components to process SOAP messages.
From that, today we reached ASP.NET 4.5 and platform/web framework has changed a lot through the 10 years of journey.
Before going further lets go through a quick summery of additions in each releases:
ASP.NET 1.0 (January 16, 2002)
- Object-oriented Web application development supporting inheritance, polymorphism and other standard OOP features
- Support for generic HTML controls and ASP.NET dynamic web controls
- Event based programming
- The developer can make use of DLL class libraries and other features of the Web server to build more robust applications that do more than simply rendering HTML.
- Integrated development support using Visual Studio .Net 2002
ASP.NET 1.1 (April 24, 2003)
- With ASP.NET 1.1 – an update to .NET framework 1.0 called as .Net framework 1.1 – we received support for Mobile Web Controls, Automatic input validation
- Integrated development support using Visual Studio .Net 2003
ASP.NET 2.0 (November 7, 2005)
ASP.NET 2.0 introduced major updates to ASP.NET framework with introduction of Master pages and new data controls.
The interesting features included in this release were:
- Integrated development support using Visual Studio 2005
- New data controls (GridView, FormView, DetailsView)
- New technique for declarative data access (SqlDataSource, ObjectDataSource, XmlDataSource controls)
- Navigation controls
- Master pages
- Login controls
- Themes
- Skins
- Web parts
- Personalization services
- Full pre-compilation
- New localization technique
- Support for 64-bit processors
- Provider class model
- Web Sites projects are introduced. An alternative to Web Application project model in earlier versions.
- ASP.NET AJAX has been introduced as a separate installer. Included ScriptManager, UpdatePanel etc.
ASP.NET 3.5 (November 19, 2007)
This was an incremental update to ASP.NET 2.0 and .NET Framework 2.0. Base level the Runtime was depending on .NET Framework 2.0 and set of additional runtime extension components been introduced in this release.
The interesting features included in this release were:
- Integrated development support using Visual Studio 2008
- New data controls (ListView, DataPager, LinqDataSource)
- ASP.NET AJAX included as part of the framework
- Support for HTTP pipelining and syndication feeds.
- WCF support for RSS, JSON, POX and Partial Trust
- All the .NET Framework 3.5 changes, like LINQ etc.
With .NET Framework 3.5 Service Pack 1, some more features been introduced
- Integrated development support using Visual Studio 2008 – Service Pack 1
- Incorporation of ASP.NET Dynamic Data
- Entity Framework support
- Support for controlling browser history in an ASP.NET AJAX application
- Ability to combine multiple JavaScript files into one file for more efficient downloading
- New namespaces System.Web.Abstractions and System.Web.Routing
- JQuery is included as part of the template.
- ASP.NET MVC is born
Now ASP.NET framework is spitted in to three based on the purpose
ASP.NET Core Services – all the major ASP.NET runtime components has been built in to this and will act as a base layer for all other ASP.NET components such as Web Forms, MVC, Dynamic Data etc.
Now we have three Presentation Frameworks/Components that utilizes the ASP.NET Core runtime components
- ASP.NET Web Forms – based on traditional ASP.NET web application model – dynamic *.aspx pages with code behind file.
- ASP.NET MVC – based on MVC model – *.aspx pages for View, no code behind file. Simply depended on Controller and model.
- ASP.NET Dynamic data – the quick and easy – rapid application development model with help of LINQ and Entity Framework. ASP.NET Dynamic Data helps you quickly build a fully customizable, data-driven application without writing code. Dynamic Data provides a rich scaffolding framework that is easily extensible by using the traditional ASP.NET programming model.
ASP.NET 4.0 (April 12, 2010)
The .NET Framework version 4 includes enhancements for ASP.NET 4 in targeted areas. Visual Studio 2010 and Microsoft Visual Web Developer Express also include enhancements and new features for improved Web development.
The interesting features included in this release were:
- Integrated development support using Visual Studio 2010
- jQuery Included with Web Forms and MVC
- Content Delivery Network Support
- Setting Meta Tags with the Page.MetaKeywords and Page.MetaDescription Properties
- ASP.NET MVC 3.0 with Web Pages and razor support
- IISExpress Support through Service Pack1
- and more… You can read about it in detail on the MSDN page What’s New in ASP.NET 4 and Visual Web Developer
ASP.NET 4.5 (August 15, 2012)
This was a long awaited release since ASP.NET 4.0, which includes the new improved support for Web Pages, MVC and new Web API support. With the release of .NET Framework 4.5 and Visual Studio 2012, decided to go away from Service Packs and release incremental updates whenever available.
The interesting features included in this release were:
- Async support – HttpRequest, Response, HTTP Modules and Handlers are capable of handling Async request and responses.
- AntiXSS library is integrated
- WebSockets protocol support
- Lazy request validation
- ASP.NET Web Forms – Model binding similar to ASP.NET MVC
- HTML5 support
- ASP.NET MVC 4, Web Pages 2.0, Web API, ASP.NET MVC 4 – Mobile Web Templates using jQuery Mobile
- and more… You can read about it in detail on the MSDN page What’s New in ASP.NET 4.5 and Visual Web Developer
ASP.NET and Web Tools 2012.2 update
This .2 update adds a number of new templates and features including:
- Enhancements to Web Publishing
- New Web API functionality
- New templates for Facebook Application and Single Page Application
- Real-time communication via ASP.NET SignalR
- Extensionless Web Forms via ASP.NET Friendly URLs
- Support for the new Windows Azure Authentication
- and more… You can read about it in detail on the MSDN page What’s New in ASP.NET and Web Tools 2012.2 Update
SignalR
SignalR is a new member of the ASP.NET family that facilitates adding real-time functionality to web applications using WebSockets and other down-level transports. SignalR is a self-contained library installed via NuGet that is targeting a 1.0 RTW as part of the Fall Update. This will include item templates for adding SignalR connections and hubs to an ASP.NET application as well as a full project template that integrates with ASP.NET MVC and ASP.NET Web API.
[ Quoted from http://aspnet.codeplex.com ]
THE ONE ASP.NET PLATFORM
Now the ASP.NET ecosystem would look as in the image, with 2012.2 release: Single platform – multiple, extensible solutions
[Image courtesy Scott Hanselman’s blog]
Scott Hanselman of Microsoft Quotes:
The idea behind One ASP.NET is that we want folks to be able to make apps that have real-time components with SignalR, clean, simple APIs with Web API, all in one pages with KnockoutJS, pages with MVC, Web Forms or Web Pages, as well as existing ASP.NET systems like OData, ASMX, and more.
We want open source projects like JSON.NET, KnockoutJS, SignalR, Backbone, MongoDB, Scaffolding, NHIbernate, Ninject (and the list goes on) to all play in the same ASP.NET LEGO sandbox.
We’ll put all these subcomponents on NuGet and they’ll live alongside community components and you’ll be able to build ASP.NET applications starting from some base template and add just the pieces you want. We are getting there. We want folks to use the parts they want, and swap out the parts they don’t. Everything should work together.
[source link]
ScottGu Quotes
The new runtime functionality is delivered to ASP.NET via additional NuGet packages. This means that installing this update does not make any changes to the existing ASP.NET binaries, and thus does not cause any compatibility issues with existing projects. New projects will contain the new functionality and existing projects can be updated with the new NuGet packages.
You can further read about it through Scott Hanselman’s article and ScottGu’s blog
Conclusion
Now with ASP.NET 4.5 and Updates we reached a place where we have a vast variety of technologies to choose from, to develop rich, dynamic web applications for Desktop browsers as well as for mobile browsers.
ASP.NET Ecosystem is growing and is moving in the right pace with the release to open source development of most of the components through http://aspnet.codeplex.com/
It is challenging and interesting for ASP.NET developers to be able to develop using such cutting edge technologies.
Information Sources & Courtesy: Wikipedia, MSDN and Microsoft Developer blogs
Discover more from Cloud Distilled ~ Nithin Mohan
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