Eric Olsson's starred repositories
eShopOnContainers
Cross-platform .NET sample microservices and container based application that runs on Linux Windows and macOS. Powered by .NET 7, Docker Containers and Azure Kubernetes Services. Supports Visual Studio, VS for Mac and CLI based environments with Docker CLI, dotnet CLI, VS Code or any other code editor. Moved to https://github.com/dotnet/eShop.
diff-so-fancy
Good-lookin' diffs. Actually… nah… The best-lookin' diffs. :tada:
WinAppDriver
Windows Application Driver
List-of-Dirty-Naughty-Obscene-and-Otherwise-Bad-Words
List of Dirty, Naughty, Obscene, and Otherwise Bad Words
Ben.Demystifier
High performance understanding for stack traces (Make error logs more productive)
commandline
Terse syntax C# command line parser for .NET with F# support
dotnet-tools
A list of tools to extend the .NET Core command line (dotnet)
ContosoUniversityDotNetCore-Pages
With Razor Pages
visualstudio-colors-solarized
Visual Studio color schemes based on https://github.com/altercation/solarized
EditorConfig
A very generic .editorconfig file supporting .NET, C#, VB and web technologies.
SAFE-BookStore
Working sample of a SAFE-Stack project with hot reloading
ContinuousTests
Continuous testing tool for .Net running only affected tests.
linux-intro-course
A gentle introduction to programming networked services on linux
UsingTestMediators
Mocks and Mocking are a solution to a certain class of problems. The problems Mocking solves are valid and important. However, I don't believe the way we achieve these solutions (via Mocking) is the correct solution. In other words the means to the end is what I have a problem with. TestMediators solve the same problem as Mocks, but the way we get there (to the solution) is very different and I prefer using TestMediators to Mocking as a result. The project here provides samples code for a simple system and a couple of unit tests that use a TestMediator.