Tutorials ASP.NET Core Web API Tutorial
Fluent API Property Configuration in EF Core — Complete Guide
Fluent API Property Configuration in EF Core — Complete Guide: free step-by-step lesson with examples, common mistakes, and interview tips — part of ASP.NET Core Web API Tutorial on Toolliyo Academy.
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ASP.NET Core Web API Tutorial · Lesson 79 of 100
Distributed Caching in Web API
Beginner ✓ → Intermediate ✓ → Advanced ✓ → Professional
Professional · 4 — Real projects · ~10 min · Module 8: Performance & Scalability
What is this?
Distributed Caching in Web API is a core Web API concept. Learn the idea in plain words first, then run the example in ShopNest.API.
Why should you care?
Interviewers and production teams expect you to explain Distributed Caching in Web API clearly — not just copy code from Stack Overflow.
See it live — copy this example
Create a Web API (dotnet new webapi), paste the example, run dotnet run, test in Swagger.
// Distributed Caching in Web API — ShopNest.API
[ApiController]
[Route("api/[controller]")]
public class DemoController : ControllerBase
{
[HttpGet]
public IActionResult Get() => Ok(new { topic = "Distributed Caching in Web API" });
}
Run Example »
Edit the code and click Run — like W3Schools Try it Yourself.
What happened?
- Study the example line by line.
- Each part connects to Distributed Caching in Web API.
- Edit one line, run dotnet run, and test in Swagger to see what changes.
Try it yourself
- Read what Distributed Caching in Web API means in the introduction.
- Type the example in ShopNest.API — do not only copy-paste.
- Test the endpoint in Swagger or curl.
- Change a route URL or DTO property and save — test again in Swagger or curl.
- Return the wrong status code on purpose (404 instead of 200) and see what the client shows.
Remember
You learned what Distributed Caching in Web API is and when to use it. You ran or traced working API code. Move to the next lesson when you can explain it in your own words.