I spent a lot of time late last week trying to figure out exactly how to set up dependency injection for a WCF service I was developing on Windows Azure; there's some documentation out there on how to do it, but it's not nearly as helpful as I would like it. Thus I decided to document how I made WCF and Ninject play nice with each other, and I even provide a sample template you can use yourself.
I guess you came to this post by searching similar kind of issues in any of the search engine and hope that this resolved your problem. If you find this tips useful, just drop a line below and share the link to others and who knows they might find it useful too.
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Stay tuned to my blog, twitter or facebook to read more articles, tutorials, news, tips & tricks on various technology fields. Also Subscribe to our Newsletter with your Email ID to keep you updated on latest posts. We will send newsletter to your registered email address. We will not share your email address to anybody as we respect privacy.
This article is related to
C#,.NET,Architect,Intermediate,VS2010,.Net,Articles,Computer Tutorials,Dependency Injection,Ninject,WCF
C#,.NET,Architect,Intermediate,VS2010,.Net,Articles,Computer Tutorials,Dependency Injection,Ninject,WCF
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