Refit
BenchmarkDotNet
Refit | BenchmarkDotNet | |
---|---|---|
33 | 67 | |
8,108 | 10,036 | |
1.4% | 1.0% | |
8.2 | 9.2 | |
4 days ago | 6 days ago | |
C# | C# | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Refit
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Exception Handling in C# Methods returning object
A lot of people have given you good replies, but have you looked at Refit?
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Http calls on mobile, what is the preferred way / best practice
Another question that rises is, would it be better to use some HttpClient package to handle the requests, like Refit in combination with Polly. But then again, it seems Refit also uses the HttpClient factory, which was a bad thing according to the previous?
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Refactor your dotNET HTTP Clients to Typed HTTP Clients
Define a Refit client interface with the following for each API endpoint, e.g. GET /foo:
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HttpClient best approach
Use RestEase to create your own client library. Refit is a very similar and more popular library. IMO RestEase is an improvement over Refit and I prefer it, but either will solve your problems. Both are libs that have you build interfaces describing the API endpoints, then the library handles all the boilerplate code that calls HttpClient.
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What your hidden nuget gems ?
Refit - simple, typed REST clients: https://github.com/reactiveui/refit
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how to structure code for rest api calls
I'd advise using this https://github.com/reactiveui/refit tool for HTTP requests. It saves a lot of time for serialization, deserialization and exception handling.
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Roadmap for transition from Java
Use Refit, and let manage the live of HttpClient. Also, Refit will give you a strongly typed client around an API. All you have to write is the interface. Ain't that neat ? If you can't, use the HttpClientFactory to create the HttpClient instance: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/architecture/microservices/implement-resilient-applications/use-httpclientfactory-to-implement-resilient-http-requests
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ASP.NET Core - how to properly make a GET request?
Use RestEase to create your own client library. Refit is a very similar and more popular library. IMO RestEase is an improvement over Refit and I prefer it, but either will solve your problems. Both are libs that have you build interfaces describing the API endpoints, then the library handles all the boilerplate code that calls HttpClient.
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Integration tests without API dependencies with ASP.NET Core and WireMock.Net
The controller is simple and use the Refit library to abstract the PokéAPI call and then, returns the data.
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I love refit
To be fair, Refit is pretty great.
BenchmarkDotNet
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Stop Guessing, Start Measuring: Transform Your Code with BenchmarkDotnet!
Let’s look at the first example you see, when you open up BenchmarkDotnet’s website, or Github page.
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Benchmarking 20 programming languages on N-queens and matrix multiplication
Or use BenchmarkDotNet which, among other things to get an accurate benchmark, does JIT warmup outside of measurement.
( https://github.com/dotnet/BenchmarkDotNet ).
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How to improve C# performance on matrix multiplication example?
You can also do proper statistically correct benchmarking by using - https://github.com/dotnet/BenchmarkDotNet. This will run warmup the jit, gauge the overheads, and run your function many times to give you proper data.
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C# Memory Profiler on VSCode
take a look at: https://benchmarkdotnet.org/
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standard events vs MVVM Reference Messenger
Yes, weak references are slower than direct calls. How much slower? Heck if I know offhand. But it's usually pretty easy to set up something with Benchmark .NET and find out if it hurts your use case.
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Mechanisms and Performance when querying data to SQLServer from C#
For this purpose we are going to use our beloved BenchmarkDotNet tool.
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Object Mapping in .NET
To quantify and compare the performance of the object mapping strategies discussed earlier, we can employ BenchmarkDotNet.
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Exploring Code Performance Testing in C# with BenchmarkDotNet
BenchmarkDotNet is a popular open-source library that, as stated in the repo's README.md, helps us to transform methods into benchmarks, track their performance, and share reproducible measurement experiments. Using BenchmarkDotNet feels similar to writing unit tests. It's very important to note that the library only works with console apps. Finally, we can visualize the results in the terminal where the benchmark ran or in user-friendly formats such as markdown, HTML and CSV. We will explore examples of there formats later in the article.
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Is it okay to lock on a StringBuilder, on which StringBuilrer I perform some operations on?
However, obviously this prevents parallelism within the lock, so this only makes sense if you do some other expensive operation in the parallel loop and the string builder is only a small part of it. Performance wise, it may be better to concatenate the results together after the parallel operation, instead of locking inside the loop. You'll have to benchmark it to know for sure.
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Iterator Benchmarks That Shocked With Unexpected Results!
We’re of course going to be using BenchmarkDotNet for our benchmarks, and you can find all of the code for these over at GitHub. To start, we need an entry point hook for our single Benchmark class that will be defining the permutations of scenarios that we’d like to run. This will be relatively basic as follows:
What are some alternatives?
RestSharp - Simple REST and HTTP API Client for .NET
App.Metrics - App Metrics is an open-source and cross-platform .NET library used to record and report metrics within an application.
Flurl.Http - Fluent URL builder and testable HTTP client for .NET
CodeMaid - CodeMaid is an open source Visual Studio extension to cleanup and simplify our C#, C++, F#, VB, PHP, PowerShell, JSON, XAML, XML, ASP, HTML, CSS, LESS, SCSS, JavaScript and TypeScript coding.
RestEase - Easy-to-use typesafe REST API client library for .NET Standard 1.1 and .NET Framework 4.5 and higher, which is simple and customisable. Inspired by Refit
Metrics-Net - The Metrics.NET library provides a way of instrumenting applications with custom metrics (timers, histograms, counters etc) that can be reported in various ways and can provide insights on what is happening inside a running application.
NSwag - The Swagger/OpenAPI toolchain for .NET, ASP.NET Core and TypeScript.
StyleCop - Analyzes C# source code to enforce a set of style and consistency rules.
Simple.OData.Client
Bogus - :card_index: A simple fake data generator for C#, F#, and VB.NET. Based on and ported from the famed faker.js.
Ocelot - .NET API Gateway
.NET Compiler Platform ("Roslyn") Analyzers