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You're reading from  Xamarin 4.x Cross-Platform Application Development - Third Edition

Product typeBook
Published inDec 2016
Reading LevelIntermediate
Publisher
ISBN-139781786465412
Edition3rd Edition
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Author (1)
Jonathan Peppers
Jonathan Peppers
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Jonathan Peppers

Jonathan Peppers is a Xamarin MVP and lead developer on popular apps and games at Hitcents such as the Hanx Writer (for Tom Hanks) and the Draw a Stickman franchise. Jon has been working with C# for over 10 years working on a wide range of projects at Hitcents. Jon began his career working Self-Checkout software written in WinForms and later migrated to WPF. Over his career, he has worked with many .NET-centric technologies such as ASP.Net WebForms, MVC, Windows Azure, WinRT/UWP, F#, and Unity3D. In recent years, Hitcents has been heavily investing in mobile development with Xamarin, and has development over 50 mobile applications across multiple platforms.
Read more about Jonathan Peppers

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Accessing contacts


To begin our exploration of what Xamarin.Mobile offers, let's access the address book within a Xamarin application. Let's improve the add friend feature of XamSnap by loading friends from the user's contact list. Make sure to add Xamarin.Mobile to the project from the Component Store for both the iOS and Android projects.

Navigate to the XamSnap portable class library. First, we will need to split apart the IWebService interface, by moving one method to a new IFriendService interface:

public interface IFriendService 
{ 
    Task<User[]> GetFriends(string userName); 
} 

Next, in FriendViewModel, we will need to use the new IFriendService interface instead of the old one:

private IFriendService friendService =  
  ServiceContainer.Resolve<IFriendService>(); 
 
public async Task GetFriends() 
{ 
  //previous code here, use 'friendService' instead of 'service' 
  Friends = await friendService.GetFriends(settings.User...
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Xamarin 4.x Cross-Platform Application Development - Third Edition
Published in: Dec 2016Publisher: ISBN-13: 9781786465412

Author (1)

author image
Jonathan Peppers

Jonathan Peppers is a Xamarin MVP and lead developer on popular apps and games at Hitcents such as the Hanx Writer (for Tom Hanks) and the Draw a Stickman franchise. Jon has been working with C# for over 10 years working on a wide range of projects at Hitcents. Jon began his career working Self-Checkout software written in WinForms and later migrated to WPF. Over his career, he has worked with many .NET-centric technologies such as ASP.Net WebForms, MVC, Windows Azure, WinRT/UWP, F#, and Unity3D. In recent years, Hitcents has been heavily investing in mobile development with Xamarin, and has development over 50 mobile applications across multiple platforms.
Read more about Jonathan Peppers