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Home/ Questions/Q 793541
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T22:10:10+00:00 2026-05-14T22:10:10+00:00

I’m done some WinForms work in C# but now moving to have to develop

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I’m done some WinForms work in C# but now moving to have to develop a web application front end in .NET (C#). I have experience developing web apps in Ruby on Rails (& a little with Java with JSP pages & struts mvc).

Should I jump straight to MVC framework? (as opposed to going ASP.net) That is from the point of view of future direction for Microsoft & as well ease in ramping up from myself.

Or if you like, given my experience to date, what would the pros/cons for me re MVC versus ASP.net?

thanks

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T22:10:11+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 10:10 pm

    If you need to work really close to the wire then MVC is a great choice. By this I mean, if you need to have very tight controls over markup then; while acheivable with WebForms; it is much easier with MVC. This would be common for applications that are targeting a public (e.g. internet) audience which might have a richer graphical experience. In contrast, if you’re developing an internal (e.g. intranet) business application where graphical presentation is not as critical, then WebForms has a lot of really nice enabling capabilities that will allow you to move more quickly.
    Don’t get me wrong, you can make WebForm applications look really really nice, but you give up some control over the markup.

    Very often ViewState comes into this kind of discussion. MVC will not have any ViewState so the on-the-wire footprint will be much smaller which translates to speed and bandwidth cost savings at some point. On the downside, making stateful applications with MVC can be more painful. In contrast, WebForms will carry ViewState by default and are inherently more stateful. This is typically fine for internal applications. Keep in mind that ViewState does not have to be sent over the wire… there are extensions that allow you to offload that to a local cache. I’m not favoring one over the other, but you should be aware of what each can do in this regard.

    If unit testing is important to you then MVC is also a much better choice, as this is easier as well. This is totally acheivable in WebForms but requires you pattern your code behind correctly.

    Security is not a major factor since much of setting up the IPrinciple and IIdentity occure in the HTTP pipeline via HttpModules, so either will do in that regard.

    Another major factor in making your choice relates to your skills relative to the time you have to deliver… If you’re not used to working in a stateless manner or coding standard web technologies (e.g. html, css, jquery, etc…) MVC will take you longer to do very basic things. With that said, once in place it will likely be cleaner, smaller, more testable, and faster. If you need to move very quickly there is a lot you can do faster in WebForms. WebForms also does a lot of heavy lifting with respect to markup so there are a number of details you can leave to ASP.NET.

    I actually use both for a variety of reasons, and MS has stated they plan to continue support and development for both.

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