Nov
04
2008
Here’s the video from the talk on dependency injection with Castle Windsor that Mike Hadlow and I did last month at Skills Matter.
in the first part of the talk, Mike introduces Dependency Injection and explains how to apply that pattern in practice with Castle Windsor. Then he talks about Castle component lifestyles and implementing common architectural and design patterns using Castle Windsor component model. In the second part of the talk, I present strategies how to manage component configuration effectively for production. After that, I explain how to use Castle facilities to extend the framework, integrate third-party services and manage components easier.
download the slides and the source code from the talk.
Oct
20
2008
Mike Hadlow and I will present the principles of dependency injection, show how to implement them with Castle Windsor and then talk about some more advanced stuff such as Windsor facilities and
implementing custom functionality with them.
This session is aimed at .NET developers at all levels, it is free but upfront registration is required for capacity planning. We have only about 15 seats left in the room so if you were planning to attend, now is the time to sign up.
Aug
27
2008
We have worked out the schedule for opensource .NET talks at Skills Matter in London for the next few months. Here are the dates to note in your calendar – more detail on sessions will follow:
- 25th September: Script #, .NET response to Google Web Toolkit.
Registration is now open
- 23rd October: Dependency injection with Castle Windsor
- 27th November: Asynchronous enterprise .NET applications with NServiceBus
- 17th December: Test driven development in .NET
We will probably do another Alt.NET evening in January like the one this July. This time we’ll have more time and hopefully a bigger venue. At the moment, we have a slot on 13th Jan available for this. If you attended the July talks, please let me know what you thought of the way that we organised it, what you liked, what you disliked, and what we could do to make it better next time.