Boost Your C# With Behavioural Design Patterns

Learn the final 11 behavioural design patterns from the Gang of Four's design patterns book and elevate your C# development skills to new heights.

  • Overview
  • Curriculum
  • Instructor
  • Review

Brief Summary

This course dives into the last 11 behavioural design patterns from the 'Gang of Four'. It’s designed for C# developers wanting to enhance their skills and ace interviews. With easy-to-follow lectures and code examples, you'll be ready to tackle application architecture like a pro!

Key Points

  • Complete guide to the final 11 behavioural design patterns.
  • Based on the famous 'Gang of Four' book.
  • Patterns help structure interactions in application architecture.
  • Course suitable for beginner to intermediate C# developers.
  • Prepare for job interviews with solid software architecture knowledge.

Learning Outcomes

  • Understand and apply all 11 behavioural design patterns.
  • Use the Command pattern for operation invocation.
  • Build effective State Machines.
  • Enhance your application architecture skills.
  • Prepare for software architecture job interviews.

About This Course

A complete guide to the final 11 behavioural design patterns from the famous book by the Gang Of Four.

In 1994 the "Gang of Four" published a book titled "Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software". This book contains 23 fundamental software design patterns. It is regarded as the standard reference manual for object-oriented design theory and practice.

In this course I will teach you the final 11 design patterns. These are all behavioural design patterns. You use these patterns to structure how the different parts of your application architecture interact with each other.

By the end of the course you will be fluent in all 11 behavioural design patterns. With this knowledge you will be well on your way to become a Senior Application Architect.

Why should you take this course?

You should take this course if you are a beginner or intermediate C# developer and want to take your career to the next level. Some of the patterns (e.g. 'Visitor') might sound very complicated, but all of my lectures are very easy to follow, and I explain all topics with clear code and many instructive diagrams. You'll have no trouble following along.

Or maybe you're working on the application architecture of a large project, and you need to create a robust design that is instantly clear to your team members? The patterns in this course will help you immensely.

Or maybe you're preparing for a C# related job interview? This course will give you an excellent foundation to answer any software architecture questions they might throw at you.

  • Learn all 11 Behavioural Design Patterns

  • Invoke operations with the Command pattern

  • Build a State Machine

Instructor

Profile photo of Mark Farragher
Mark Farragher

Mark Farragher is a blogger, investor, serial entrepreneur, and the author of 12 successful IT courses on Udemy and other marketplaces. His career spans over two decades during which Mark has been a Founder twice and CTO three times, and has launched two lean startups in The Netherlands.Mark became a Microsoft Certified Trainer in 2005 and started training classes in...

Review
4.9 course rating
4K ratings
ui-avatar of Prakash Rana
Prakash R.
4.5
1 year ago

Awesome. Thank you so much, Mark, for such a wonderful course. It has given me a very clear understanding of all these 11 behavioural patterns. Very few of such courses could be found anywhere. Mark has made all these patterns look very simpler with the use of very useful and relevant examples, which otherwise, are not so easy to understand. Thank you so much Mark Farragher, and Udemy.

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ui-avatar of Jose Zamorano
Jose Z.
5.0
1 year ago

The course is very practical and it describe the participants in the patterns, the intent, the benefits and disadvantages as well as provides a real world example to demonstrate the pattern. It has the right amount of balance between theory and practice. I am glad I took this course.

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ui-avatar of Alexander Buck
Alexander B.
4.5
2 years ago

Clear learning path. Examples are well chosen to show the advantages of the patterns.

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ui-avatar of User 2
User 2.
5.0
2 years ago

perfect

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ui-avatar of Keerthana S307Ab5
Keerthana S.
5.0
2 years ago

Learning more new topics.

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ui-avatar of Wendy Ureña Castro
Wendy U. C.
3.0
3 years ago

..

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ui-avatar of Ashutosh Dubey
Ashutosh D.
5.0
3 years ago

Perfect

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ui-avatar of John Gonzalez, Ph.D.
John G. P.
5.0
3 years ago

The course is good and give you an extra value than yourself reading the original gang of four book.

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ui-avatar of Anonymized User
Anonymized U.
5.0
3 years ago

Definetly "must" course if you haven't read that famous book by the Gang Of Four recently or are unsure, how to implement these patterns in C#

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ui-avatar of Andrew Jakobs
Andrew J.
3.0
4 years ago

First, this should have just been part of the other course of structural and creational patterns. Second, it was too 'dry', too much like he just read it from the book directly, and he lost me many times during the explanation of a pattern. Personally I would have liked it to have started with the problem the pattern is gonna solve, and maybe actually explain the pattern with an example instead of first just summoning up what it is supposed to be doing. Even with the last Visitor pattern I still have big difficulty in aligning my thoughts as why it would be called visitor and why the Accept function is called Accept and the Visitor function called Visit, but that's probably just me (I know why and what it does, but I just don't get the comparison to a visitor). But that's not the tutor's fault as he's only reading it from the book of gang of four.
I'm a 'professional' developer for 25 years (I quote professional as IMHO when I look around, I hardly see any real professional developers), and I just wanted to know what all the fuzz was about in regard to these patterns, but in reality I think the explanation is by this book is highly overrated, especially in regard to naming. BUT it's good to now about what you can do to try to solve some specific type of problems.
As I said, the biggest problem I had with this course was the not so good explanation of the patterns, when I checked out some others on youtube (one was sadly for javascript, but in the first 30 seconds of the video with the example he used the pattern was instantly clear to me, whereas with this course it only was clear to me by the end of the video...
I think Farragher's other courses on memory mangement etc are much better.

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