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Showing posts with the label Contacts application

How Dependency Injection Containers Work in C#?

Dependency Injection (DI) containers, such as Unity or DryIoc, help manage the creation and lifetime of object dependencies in C#. They facilitate the Inversion of Control (IoC) principle, allowing you to focus on writing clean, maintainable code without worrying about the complexities of instantiating dependencies manually. How DI Containers Work? Registration:  You define which concrete classes should be used to fulfill specific interface contracts. This allows the DI container to know what to instantiate when a class requests a particular dependency. Resolution:  When an instance of a class is requested, the DI container looks at the registered services, resolves the dependencies, and creates the object with the required dependencies injected. Lifetime Management:  The container manages the lifecycle of the dependencies. You can specify whether instances should be singleton (one instance for the entire application), transient (a new instance each time), or scoped (one instance per r

Getting Started with Microsoft Community Toolkit for MVVM: A Step-by-Step Guide

Microsoft Community Toolkit is an open-source project that provides a set of controls, services, and helpers for building Windows applications. One of the key features of the toolkit is its support for the Model-View-ViewModel (MVVM) pattern. In this blog post, we'll explore how to use Microsoft Community Toolkit for MVVM and how it can help simplify the development of Windows applications. Step 1: Install the Microsoft Community Toolkit The first step to using the Microsoft Community Toolkit for MVVM is to install it. You can install the toolkit through NuGet, the .NET package manager. You can do this by right-clicking on your project in the Solution Explorer, selecting "Manage NuGet Packages," and searching for "Microsoft.Toolkit.Mvvm." Click "Install" to add the package to your project. Step 2: Set up the MVVM Structure Once you have installed the Microsoft Community Toolkit, you can start setting up the MVVM structure. The MVVM pattern separates th

Getting Started with Microsoft Community Toolkit for MVVM: A Step-by-Step Guide

Microsoft Community Toolkit is an open-source project that provides a set of controls, services, and helpers for building Windows applications. One of the key features of the toolkit is its support for the Model-View-ViewModel (MVVM) pattern. In this blog post, we'll explore how to use Microsoft Community Toolkit for MVVM and how it can help simplify the development of Windows applications. Step 1: Install the Microsoft Community Toolkit The first step to using the Microsoft Community Toolkit for MVVM is to install it. You can install the toolkit through NuGet, the .NET package manager. You can do this by right-clicking on your project in the Solution Explorer, selecting "Manage NuGet Packages," and searching for "Microsoft.Toolkit.Mvvm." Click "Install" to add the package to your project. Step 2: Set up the MVVM Structure Once you have installed the Microsoft Community Toolkit, you can start setting up the MVVM structure. The MVVM pattern separates th