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Showing posts with the label WPF Metro UI tutorial

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

Mastering Modern UI: A Step-by-Step Guide to Creating Metro UI in WPF

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To create metro ui you first have to install "Mahapps.metro" from NuGet.To install it right click on project and click on manage NuGet and type Mahapps.metro you will get this package you have to install from here.Now you are ready to create metro ui.Now open you Mainwindow.xaml and add one namespace like bellow xmlns:Controls="clr-namespace:MahApps.Metro.Controls;assembly=MahApps.Metro"  and replace  Window  to  Controls:MetroWindow Now your Mainwindow.xaml become <Controls:MetroWindow x:Class="ProjectName.MainWindow"           xmlns= "http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"           xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml"           xmlns:Controls="clr-namespace:MahApps.Metro.Controls;assembly=MahApps.Metro"           Title="MainWindow"           H eight="600"           Width="800">   <!-- your content --> </Con