One of the topics that feature very often in these discussions, if not the most often, is the lack of functionality in the services themselves or the installers that distribute these services. I have seen many articles, forums, and other writings on the pros and cons of writing Windows Services in. The article below is a copy of the original, with the exception that everything VB has been changed to C#. The modAPI file has a lot of additional code that you can play with and experiment to your hearts desire. The addition of service descriptions and setting a service to interact with the desktop are the only things I tested, as these were the only aims of the original article. You might think the code looks all crappy and I don't know the C# variable declaration conventions. The two things that the initial article meant to do (mentioned in Introduction below) works in this C# version too. But like I said, I am not a C# programmer. And someone asked me whether I'll be posting a C# version. I submitted an article to CodeProject last week with the exact same title and topic as this one. That said, this is an article about customizing installations of Windows services, in C#! I don't work in C#, I don't like C# (because I know too little about it), I don't plan to start working with C# for extended periods of time any time soon. Install a Windows service the way YOU want to! (C# version) / How To / C#īefore the article begins, just a quick word about me and C#.
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