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Microsoft Releases CTP of ASP.NET 3.5 Extensions Including MVC

Microsoft has released the first Community Technology Preview (CTP) preview of the ASP.NET 3.5 Extensions which adds additional runtime functionality to ASP.NET and .NET 3.5. A number of new features are part of the release:

• ASP.NET AJAX Improvements: New ASP.NET AJAX features in the ASP.NET 3.5 Extensions release include better browser history support (back/forward button integration, and server-side history management support), improved AJAX content linking support with permalinks, and additional JavaScript library improvements.
• ASP.NET MVC: This model view controller (MVC) framework for ASP.NET provides a structured model that enables a clear separation of concerns within web applications, and makes it easier to unit test your code and support a TDD workflow. It also helps provide more control over the URLs you publish in your applications, and more control over the HTML that is emitted from them.
• ASP.NET Dynamic Data Support: The ASP.NET 3.5 Extensions release delivers new features that enable faster creation of data driven web sites. It provides a rich scaffolding framework, and will enable rapid data driven site development using both ASP.NET WebForms and ASP.NET MVC.
• ASP.NET Silverlight Support: With the ASP.NET 3.5 Extensions release we'll deliver support for easily integrating Silverlight within your ASP.NET applications. Included will be new controls that make it easy to integrate Silverlight video/media and interactive content within your sites.
• ADO.NET Data Services: In parallel with the ASP.NET Extensions release we will also be releasing the ADO.NET Entity Framework. This provides a modeling framework that enables developers to define a conceptual model of a database schema that closely aligns to a real world view of the information. We will also be shipping a new set of data services (codename "Astoria") that make it easy to expose REST based API endpoints from within your ASP.NET applications.

See Scott Guthrie’s posting for more details and links.


My take is that ASP.NET MVC and ASP.NET Dynamic Data Suppport seem to aiming directly at people using technologies such as Ruby on Rails. Hopefully supporting MVC will not split the ASP.NET community into advanced developers using MVC and lesser others using WebForms.

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This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on December 10, 2007 8:14 PM.

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