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21 sie 2017 · You can also do this in ASP.NET Core 2 by defining the connection string in your appSettings.json file. Then in your Startup.cs you specify which connection string to use. appSettings.json { "connectionStrings": { "YourDBConnectionString": "Server=(localdb)\\mssqllocaldb;Database=YourDB;Trusted_Connection=True" } } Startup.cs
To define the connection strings in appsettings.json it is important to specify it in the right section of the JSON structure. { "ConnectionStrings": { "myDb1": "Server=myServer;Database=myDb1;Trusted_Connection=True;", "myDb2": "Server=myServer;Database=myDb2;Trusted_Connection=True;" } }
15 cze 2024 · In this article I will explain with an example, how to read Connection String from AppSettings.json file in .Net Core 8 and ASP.Net Core 8.
26 sty 2024 · In this article I will explain with an example, how to read Connection String from AppSettings.json file inside Program.cs class in .Net Core 6 and ASP.Net Core 6.
28 sie 2023 · Adding a connection string to a .NET Core application's appsettings.json file is a fundamental step in establishing connections to databases and other external resources. By following this guide, you've learned how to seamlessly integrate connection strings into your application's configuration, providing a clean and organized approach to ...
In .NET Core, you can store your connection strings in the appsettings.json configuration file and retrieve them using the built-in configuration system. Here's how to get a connection string from appsettings.json in C#: Add the connection string to the appsettings.json file in your project:
15 cze 2024 · In our first example, we will see how to retrieve the connection string from the appsettings.json file using a console application: var connectionString = configuration.GetConnectionString("DefaultConnection");