Plain C# Entry point

VContainer allows plain C# to be the starting point for application processing. Using it instead of MonoBehaviour, which has a lot of features, can help you build a simple control flow.

clas FooController : IStartable
{
void IStartable.Start()
{
// Do something ...
}
}
builder.RegisterEntryPoint<FooController>(Lifetime.Scoped);

See register

VContainer does this with its own PlayerLoopSystem.

If you register a class that implements the marker interface, it will be scheduled in Unity's PlayerLoop cycle.

Since it uses PlayerLoopSystem, it works even if you register at any time (e.g: IStartable etc)

Available interfaces#

VContaienr entry pointTiming
IInitializable.Initialize()Early PlayerLoop.Initialization
IPostInitializable.PostInitialize()Late PlayerLoop.Initialization
IStartable.Start()Nearly MonoBehaviour.Start()
IPostStartable.PostStart()After MonoBehaviour.Start()
IFixedTickable.FixedTick()Nearly MonoBehaviour.FixedUpdate()
IPostFixedTickable.PostFixedTick()After MonoBehaviour.FixedUpdate()
ITickable.Tick()Nearly MonoBehaviour.Update()
IPostTickable.PostTick()After MonoBehaviour.Update()
ILateTickable.LateTick()Nearly MonoBehaviour.LateUpdate()
IPostLateTickable.LateTick()After MonoBehaviour.LateUpdate()

And

  • IDisposable : With container disposes. (For Lifetime.Singleton / Lifetime.Scoped)

Handle of the exception that was not caught#

On the application side, exceptions thrown in processes such as Start() and Tick() cannot be caught outside.

By default, VContainer logs unhandled exceptions as UnityEngine.Debug.LogException. As another option, you can register a callback for each LifetimeScope.

builder.RegisterEntryPointExceptionHandler(ex =>
{
// ...
});
caution

Default error logging will be skipped if you are using the RegisterEntryPointExceptionHandler.

UniTask#

If you are using UniTask, you can use IAsyncStartable. see also UniTask Integration