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Skill 02 - C# Language Fundamentals

Core Concepts

C# code is made of keywords, identifiers, literals, operators, expressions, statements, blocks, members, types, namespaces, and assemblies.

Naming Rules

  • Use PascalCase for public types, methods, properties, events, and constants.
  • Use camelCase for local variables and parameters.
  • Use _camelCase for private fields when that is the project convention.
  • Name things by meaning, not by type suffix, except accepted suffixes like Async, Options, Exception, Attribute, and Controller.

Variables and Constants

  • Use var when the right side makes the type obvious.
  • Use explicit types when they improve clarity or prevent accidental narrowing.
  • Use const only for compile-time constants that will not change.
  • Use readonly fields for values set during construction.
  • Prefer immutable data where practical.

Strings

  • Use string interpolation for readable formatting.
  • Use StringBuilder for repeated string mutation in loops.
  • Be explicit about culture for user-facing versus machine-readable formatting.
  • Use ordinal comparisons for identifiers, keys, codes, and protocol values.
  • Use culture-aware comparisons only for human language sorting/searching.

Console and Script-Like Code

  • Top-level statements are fine for small apps, samples, and tools.
  • Move logic into functions or classes once behavior needs tests.
  • Keep Program.cs thin in production apps.

Style Rules

  • Prefer clarity over language cleverness.
  • Avoid unnecessary dynamic; use it only for genuinely dynamic data boundaries.
  • Prefer pattern matching when it makes type and shape checks clearer.
  • Use nameof(...) instead of string literals for member names.

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