Because I want to receive other bindings:
public Service someService(@Inject Settings settings) {
SomeService s = new SomeService(settings.getHost())
inj.injectMembers(s)
return s
}
Den fredag den 7. marts 2014 23.32.42 UTC+1 skrev Nate Bauernfeind:
>
> What about your use case prevents you from using a normal .to binding?
>
> bind(SomeService.class).to(SomeService.class)
>
> Nate
>
>
> On Fri, Mar 7, 2014 at 4:13 PM, Mikkel Petersen <[email protected]<javascript:>
> > wrote:
>
>> Hello all
>>
>> I have a slight problem with guice injection when using a method
>> annotated with @Provides
>>
>> example :
>>
>> @Provides
>> public Service someService() {
>> return new SomeService()
>> }
>>
>> I would like to get the current context injected in SomeService..I don't
>> understand why Guice doesn't do that automatically, any particular reason
>> for that ?
>>
>> I know I could do something like this (it works):
>>
>> @Provides
>> public Service someService(@Inject Injector inj) {
>> SomeService s = new SomeService()
>> inj.injectMembers(s)
>> return s
>> }
>>
>> But there must be a simpler way.
>>
>> Thanks
>>
>> Ps, another question, how to add syntax highlighting ?
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
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>
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