aspnetcore/tutorials/first-mvc-app/start-mvc/includes/start-mvc5.md
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This is the first tutorial of a series that teaches ASP.NET Core MVC web development with controllers and views.
At the end of the series, you'll have an app that manages and displays movie data. You learn how to:
[!div class="checklist"]
- Create a web app.
- Add and scaffold a model.
- Work with a database.
- Add search and validation.
View or download sample code (how to download).
MvcMovie for Project name. It's important to name the project MvcMovie. Capitalization needs to match each namespace matches when code is copied.For alternative approaches to create the project, see Create a new project in Visual Studio.
Visual Studio used the default project template for the created MVC project. The created project:
The tutorial assumes familiarity with VS Code. For more information, see Getting started with VS Code.
Select New Terminal from the Terminal menu to open the integrated terminal.
Change to the directory (cd) that will contain the project.
Run the following commands:
dotnet new mvc -o MvcMovie
code -r MvcMovie
The dotnet new command creates a new ASP.NET Core MVC project in the MvcMovie folder.
The code command opens the MvcMovie project folder in the current instance of Visual Studio Code.
Select File > New Solution.
In Visual Studio for Mac earlier than version 8.6, select .NET Core > App > Web Application (Model-View-Controller) > Next. In version 8.6 or later, select Web and Console > App > Web Application (Model-View-Controller) > Next.
In the Configure your new Web Application dialog:
Name the project MvcMovie, and then select Create.
Select Ctrl+F5 to run the app without the debugger.
Visual Studio:
The address bar shows localhost:port# and not something like example.com. The standard hostname for your local computer is localhost. When Visual Studio creates a web project, a random port is used for the web server.
Launching the app without debugging by selecting Ctrl+F5 allows you to:
You can launch the app in debug or non-debug mode from the Debug menu item:
You can debug the app by selecting the IIS Express button
The following image shows the app:
Select Ctrl+F5 to run without the debugger.
Visual Studio Code:
https://localhost:5001.The address bar shows localhost:port:5001 and not something like example.com. The standard hostname for your local computer is localhost. Localhost only serves web requests from the local computer.
Launching the app without debugging by selecting Ctrl+F5 allows you to:
Make code changes.
Save the file.
Quickly refresh the browser and see the code changes.
Select Run > Start Without Debugging to launch the app.
Visual Studio for Mac:
http://localhost:port, where port is a randomly chosen port number.The address bar shows localhost:port# and not something like example.com. The standard hostname for your local computer is localhost. When Visual Studio creates a web project, a random port is used for the web server.
You can launch the app in debug or non-debug mode from the Run menu.
The following image shows the app:
In the next part of this tutorial, you learn about MVC and start writing some code.
[!div class="step-by-step"] Next
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