Injecting into MonoBehaviours
As MonoBehaviour
s do not support constructors, you must use method injection to inject them with dependencies.
Note that the presence of the [Inject]
attribute on a MonoBehaviour
's method does not imply that it will automatically be called. You must inject dependencies manually in one of the following three ways:
- If you want to inject into a specific
MonoBehaviour
, you can specify it in theLifetimeScope
's inspector.- The
MonoBehaviour
s of all specifiedGameObject
(and their children) will be automaticallyInject
ed when theLifetimeScope
is initialized.
- The
- Use one of the
RegisterComponent*
methods to register theMonoBehaviour
instance to the container.- In this case, the registered
MonoBehaviour
will bothInject
and beInject
ed into other classes. - See Register MonoBehaviour
- In this case, the registered
- To inject into dynamically-generated
MonoBehaviour
s at runtime (e.g. from prefabs), useIObjectResolver.Instantiate
instead ofUnityEngine.Object.Instantiate
. (Factory patterns and object generation expressions can be registered.)
MonoBehaviour
s?#
Why doesn't VContainer automatically inject into all - Unity doesn't provide a good way to listen for the creation of all
GameObject
s orMonoBehaviour
s. Rather than having some cases that are automaticallyInject
ed and some that are not, we decided on explicitInject
ion that you can use to fit your own needs. - We do not recommend excecuting
Inject
directly onMonoBehaviour
s; instead, useInjectGameObject
on the owningGameObject
.MonoBehaviour
is a C# class that allows you to write code for anything, also, it is dynamically created/destroyed at runtime. Injection into an object with a dynamic lifetime complicates reference management. The simplest solution to this is to not do it.- This is because the purpose of VContainer and DI is inversion of control of MonoBehaviour.
- View component is often the starting point for detecting events and happenings, but it can also be styled to notify the outside world that it has ownership of the events it detects.
- If a
MonoBehaviour
needs an explicitInject
call, you risk losing the advantages of Unity's prefab portability. - Of course, in order for the View component to work, it needs to know the data/state to be displayed on the screen, but data that changes rapidly at runtime is not subject to injection by
[Inject]
, and is better handled as mere "values" by arguments.