Use dependency injection

Back in the TodoController, add some code to work with the ITodoItemService:

public class TodoController : Controller
{
    private readonly ITodoItemService _todoItemService;

    public TodoController(ITodoItemService todoItemService)
    {
        _todoItemService = todoItemService;
    }

    public IActionResult Index()
    {
        // Get to-do items from database

        // Put items into a model

        // Pass the view to a model and render
    }
}

Since ITodoItemService is in the Services namespace, you'll also need to add a using statement at the top:

using AspNetCoreTodo.Services;

The first line of the class declares a private variable to hold a reference to the ITodoItemService. This variable lets you use the service from the Index action method later (you'll see how in a minute).

The public TodoController(ITodoItemService todoItemService) line defines a constructor for the class. The constructor is a special method that is called when you want to create a new instance of a class (the TodoController class, in this case). By adding an ITodoItemService parameter to the constructor, you've declared that in order to create the TodoController, you'll need to provide an object that matches the ITodoItemService interface.

Interfaces are awesome because they help decouple (separate) the logic of your application. Since the controller depends on the ITodoItemService interface, and not on any specific class, it doesn't know or care which class it's actually given. It could be the FakeTodoItemService, a different one that talks to a live database, or something else! As long as it matches the interface, the controller can use it. This makes it really easy to test parts of your application separately. I'll cover testing in detail in the Automated testing chapter.

Now you can finally use the ITodoItemService (via the private variable you declared) in your action method to get to-do items from the service layer:

public IActionResult Index()
{
    var items = await _todoItemService.GetIncompleteItemsAsync();

    // ...
}

Remember that the GetIncompleteItemsAsync method returned a Task<TodoItem[]>? Returning a Task means that the method won't necessarily have a result right away, but you can use the await keyword to make sure your code waits until the result is ready before continuing on.

The Task pattern is common when your code calls out to a database or an API service, because it won't be able to return a real result until the database (or network) responds. If you've used promises or callbacks in JavaScript or other languages, Task is the same idea: the promise that there will be a result - sometime in the future.

If you've had to deal with "callback hell" in older JavaScript code, you're in luck. Dealing with asynchronous code in .NET is much easier thanks to the magic of the await keyword! await lets your code pause on an async operation, and then pick up where it left off when the underlying database or network request finishes. In the meantime, your application isn't blocked, because it can process other requests as needed. This pattern is simple but takes a little getting used to, so don't worry if this doesn't make sense right away. Just keep following along!

The only catch is that you need to update the Index method signature to return a Task<IActionResult> instead of just IActionResult, and mark it as async:

public async Task<IActionResult> Index()
{
    var items = await _todoItemService.GetIncompleteItemsAsync();

    // Put items into a model

    // Pass the view to a model and render
}

You're almost there! You've made the TodoController depend on the ITodoItemService interface, but you haven't yet told ASP.NET Core that you want the FakeTodoItemService to be the actual service that's used under the hood. It might seem obvious right now since you only have one class that implements ITodoItemService, but later you'll have multiple classes that implement the same interface, so being explicit is necessary.

Declaring (or "wiring up") which concrete class to use for each interface is done in the ConfigureServices method of the Startup class. Right now, it looks something like this:

Startup.cs

public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
{
    // (... some code)

    services.AddMvc();
}

The job of the ConfigureServices method is adding things to the service container, or the collection of services that ASP.NET Core knows about. The services.AddMvc line adds the services that the internal ASP.NET Core systems need (as an experiment, try commenting out this line). Any other services you want to use in your application must be added to the service container here in ConfigureServices.

Add the following line anywhere inside the ConfigureServices method:

services.AddSingleton<ITodoItemService, FakeTodoItemService>();

This line tells ASP.NET Core to use the FakeTodoItemService whenever the ITodoItemService interface is requested in a constructor (or anywhere else).

AddSingleton adds your service to the service container as a singleton. This means that only one copy of the FakeTodoItemService is created, and it's reused whenever the service is requested. Later, when you write a different service class that talks to a database, you'll use a different approach (called scoped) instead. I'll explain why in the Use a database chapter.

That's it! When a request comes in and is routed to the TodoController, ASP.NET Core will look at the available services and automatically supply the FakeTodoItemService when the controller asks for an ITodoItemService. Because the services are "injected" from the service container, this pattern is called dependency injection.

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