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How to: Use a Windows Communication Foundation Client

This is the sixth of six tasks required to create a basic Windows Communication Foundation (WCF) service and a client that can call the service. For an overview of all six of the tasks, see the Getting Started Tutorial topic.

Once a Windows Communication Foundation (WCF) proxy has been created and configured, a client instance can be created and the client application can be compiled and used to communicate with the WCF service. This topic describes procedures for creating and using a WCF client. This procedure does three things: creates a WCF client, calls the service operations from the generated proxy, and closes the client once the operation call is completed.

The code discussed in the procedure is also provided in the example following the procedure. The code in this task should be placed in the Main() method of the generated Program class in the client project.

To use a Windows Communication Foundation client

  1. Create an EndpointAddress instance for the base address of the service you are going to call and then create an WCF Client object.

    ' Step 1: Create an endpoint address and an instance of the WCF Client.
    Dim epAddress As New EndpointAddress("https://localhost:8000/ServiceModelSamples/Service/CalculatorService")
    Dim Client As New CalculatorClient(New WSHttpBinding(), epAddress)
    
    //Step 1: Create an endpoint address and an instance of the WCF Client.
    CalculatorClient client = new CalculatorClient();
    
  2. Call the client operations from within the Client.

    'Step 2: Call the service operations.
    'Call the Add service operation.
    Dim value1 As Double = 100D
    Dim value2 As Double = 15.99D
    Dim result As Double = Client.Add(value1, value2)
    Console.WriteLine("Add({0},{1}) = {2}", value1, value2, result)
    
    'Call the Subtract service operation.
    value1 = 145D
    value2 = 76.54D
    result = Client.Subtract(value1, value2)
    Console.WriteLine("Subtract({0},{1}) = {2}", value1, value2, result)
    
    'Call the Multiply service operation.
    value1 = 9D
    value2 = 81.25D
    result = Client.Multiply(value1, value2)
    Console.WriteLine("Multiply({0},{1}) = {2}", value1, value2, result)
    
    'Call the Divide service operation.
    value1 = 22D
    value2 = 7D
    result = Client.Divide(value1, value2)
    Console.WriteLine("Divide({0},{1}) = {2}", value1, value2, result)
    
    // Step 2: Call the service operations.
    // Call the Add service operation.
    double value1 = 100.00D;
    double value2 = 15.99D;
    double result = client.Add(value1, value2);
    Console.WriteLine("Add({0},{1}) = {2}", value1, value2, result);
    
    // Call the Subtract service operation.
    value1 = 145.00D;
    value2 = 76.54D;
    result = client.Subtract(value1, value2);
    Console.WriteLine("Subtract({0},{1}) = {2}", value1, value2, result);
    
    // Call the Multiply service operation.
    value1 = 9.00D;
    value2 = 81.25D;
    result = client.Multiply(value1, value2);
    Console.WriteLine("Multiply({0},{1}) = {2}", value1, value2, result);
    
    // Call the Divide service operation.
    value1 = 22.00D;
    value2 = 7.00D;
    result = client.Divide(value1, value2);
    Console.WriteLine("Divide({0},{1}) = {2}", value1, value2, result);
    
  3. Call Close on the WCF client and wait until the user presses the enter key to terminate the application.

    ' Step 3: Closing the client gracefully closes the connection and cleans up resources.
    Client.Close()
    
    Console.WriteLine()
    Console.WriteLine("Press <ENTER> to terminate client.")
    Console.ReadLine()
    
    //Step 3: Closing the client gracefully closes the connection and cleans up resources.
    client.Close();
    
    
    Console.WriteLine();
    Console.WriteLine("Press <ENTER> to terminate client.");
    Console.ReadLine();
    

Example

The following example shows you how to create a WCF client, how to call the operations of the client, and how to close the client once the operation call is completed.

Compile the generated WCF client and the following code example into an executable named Client.exe. Be sure to reference System.ServiceModel when compiling the code.

Imports System
Imports System.Collections.Generic
Imports System.Text
Imports System.ServiceModel


Module Client

    Sub Main()
        ' Step 1: Create an endpoint address and an instance of the WCF Client.
        Dim epAddress As New EndpointAddress("https://localhost:8000/ServiceModelSamples/Service/CalculatorService")
        Dim Client As New CalculatorClient(New WSHttpBinding(), epAddress)

        'Step 2: Call the service operations.
        'Call the Add service operation.
        Dim value1 As Double = 100D
        Dim value2 As Double = 15.99D
        Dim result As Double = Client.Add(value1, value2)
        Console.WriteLine("Add({0},{1}) = {2}", value1, value2, result)

        'Call the Subtract service operation.
        value1 = 145D
        value2 = 76.54D
        result = Client.Subtract(value1, value2)
        Console.WriteLine("Subtract({0},{1}) = {2}", value1, value2, result)

        'Call the Multiply service operation.
        value1 = 9D
        value2 = 81.25D
        result = Client.Multiply(value1, value2)
        Console.WriteLine("Multiply({0},{1}) = {2}", value1, value2, result)

        'Call the Divide service operation.
        value1 = 22D
        value2 = 7D
        result = Client.Divide(value1, value2)
        Console.WriteLine("Divide({0},{1}) = {2}", value1, value2, result)

        ' Step 3: Closing the client gracefully closes the connection and cleans up resources.
        Client.Close()

        Console.WriteLine()
        Console.WriteLine("Press <ENTER> to terminate client.")
        Console.ReadLine()

    End Sub
End Module
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Text;
using System.ServiceModel;

namespace ServiceModelSamples
{

    class Client
    {
        static void Main()
        {
            //Step 1: Create an endpoint address and an instance of the WCF Client.
            CalculatorClient client = new CalculatorClient();


            // Step 2: Call the service operations.
            // Call the Add service operation.
            double value1 = 100.00D;
            double value2 = 15.99D;
            double result = client.Add(value1, value2);
            Console.WriteLine("Add({0},{1}) = {2}", value1, value2, result);

            // Call the Subtract service operation.
            value1 = 145.00D;
            value2 = 76.54D;
            result = client.Subtract(value1, value2);
            Console.WriteLine("Subtract({0},{1}) = {2}", value1, value2, result);

            // Call the Multiply service operation.
            value1 = 9.00D;
            value2 = 81.25D;
            result = client.Multiply(value1, value2);
            Console.WriteLine("Multiply({0},{1}) = {2}", value1, value2, result);

            // Call the Divide service operation.
            value1 = 22.00D;
            value2 = 7.00D;
            result = client.Divide(value1, value2);
            Console.WriteLine("Divide({0},{1}) = {2}", value1, value2, result);

            //Step 3: Closing the client gracefully closes the connection and cleans up resources.
            client.Close();
            

            Console.WriteLine();
            Console.WriteLine("Press <ENTER> to terminate client.");
            Console.ReadLine();

        }
    }
}

Ensure the service is running before attempting to use the client. For more information, see How to: Host and Run a Basic Windows Communication Foundation Service.

To launch the client, start a Windows SDK console session by selecting CMD Shell under the Microsoft Windows SDK entry in the Start menu. Navigate to the C:\Users\<user name>\Documents\Visual Studio 2005\Projects\Service\Client\bin\Debug directory, and type client and press ENTER. The operation requests and responses appear in the client console window as follows.

Add(100,15.99) = 115.99
Subtract(145,76.54) = 68.46
Multiply(9,81.25) = 731.25
Divide(22,7) = 3.14285714285714
Press <ENTER> to terminate client.

If you see this output, you have successfully completed the tutorial. This sample demonstrates how to configure the WCF client in code. For troubleshooting information, see Troubleshooting the Getting Started Tutorial.

See Also

Tasks

How to: Create a Windows Communication Foundation Client
How to: Create a Duplex Contract
How to: Access Services with a Duplex Contract

Other Resources

Building Windows Communication Foundation Clients
Getting Started Tutorial
Basic WCF Programming
Getting Started Sample
Self-Host


© 2007 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Last Published: 2010-03-21