forked from scriptcs/scriptcs
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 8
Referencing scripts
follesoe edited this page Mar 18, 2013
·
3 revisions
You can reference other scripts from your CSX script by using a #load
directive.
Here is an example:
#load "models.csx"
#load "service.csx"
using System;
using ServiceStack.WebHost.Endpoints;
using System.Reflection;
public class AppHost : AppHostHttpListenerBase {
public AppHost() : base("StarterTemplate HttpListener", Assembly.GetExecutingAssembly()) { }
public override void Configure(Funq.Container container) {
Routes
.Add<Hello>("/hello")
.Add<Hello>("/hello/{Name}");
}
}
var port = "http://*:999/";
var appHost = new AppHost();
appHost.Init();
appHost.Start(port);
Console.WriteLine("listening on {0}", port);
Console.ReadKey();
This allows you to split your script into smaller maintainable bits or simply place common classes into separate CSX file (and even reuse between different applications). The principles here are exactly the same as including JavaScript files in JS applications.
-
#load
can only be placed at the top (before first using statement or code line) of your CSX file. - if you place
#load
inline out script pre-processor will simply exclude it. This is in-line with C# REPL/C# Interactive Window behavior. -
#load
accepts both relative and absolute paths.
#load
is not a scriptcs
invention, but rather a C# REPL standard. As a consequence of this, if you have Roslyn CTP installed and you use C# Interactive Window, you can copy paste you CSX file there and the #load
directive will be correctly recognized.