Partager via


My.WebServices Object 

Provides properties for creating and accessing a single instance of each XML Web service referenced by the current project.

Remarks

The My.WebServices object provides an instance of each Web service referenced by the current project. Each instance is instantiated on demand. You can access these Web services through the properties of the My.WebServices object. The name of the property is the same as the name of the Web service that the property accesses. Any class that inherits from SoapHttpClientProtocol is a Web service. For information about adding Web services to a project, see How to: Access an XML Web Service in Managed Code.

The My.WebServices object exposes only the Web services associated with the current project. It does not provide access to Web services declared in referenced DLLs. To access a Web service that a DLL provides, you must use the qualified name of the Web service, in the form DllName.WebServiceName. For more information, see Accessing XML Web Services in Managed Code.

The object and its properties are not available for Web applications.

Properties

Each property of the My.WebServices object provides access to an instance of a Web service referenced by the current project. The name of the property is the same as the name of the Web service that the property accesses, and the property type is the same as the Web service's type.

When you first access one of the My.WebServices object's properties, it creates a new instance of the Web service and stores it. Subsequent accesses of that property return that instance of the Web service.

You can dispose of a Web service by assigning Nothing to the property for that Web service. The property setter assigns Nothing to the stored value. If you assign any value other than Nothing to the property, the setter throws an ArgumentException exception.

You can test whether a property of the My.WebServices object stores an instance of the Web service by using the Is or IsNot operator. You can use those operators to check if the value of the property is Nothing.

Note

Typically, the Is or IsNot operator has to read the value of the property to perform the comparison. However, if the property currently stores Nothing, the property creates a new instance of the Web service and then returns that instance. However, the Visual Basic compiler treats the properties of the My.WebServices object specially, and allows the Is or IsNot operator to check the status of the property without altering its value.

Tasks

The following table lists an example of a task involving the My.Forms object.

To See

Call a Web Service asynchronously and handle an event when it completes

How to: Call a Web Service Asynchronously

Example

This example calls the FahrenheitToCelsius method of the TemperatureConverter XML Web service, and returns the result.

Function ConvertFromFahrenheitToCelsius( _
    ByVal dFahrenheit As Double) _
    As Double

    Return My.WebServices.TemperatureConverter.FahrenheitToCelsius(dFahrenheit)
End Function

For this example to work, your project must reference a Web service named Converter, and that Web service must expose the ConvertTemperature method. For more information, see How to: Access an XML Web Service in Managed Code.

This code does not work in a Web application project.

Requirements

Availability by Project Type

Project type Available

Windows Application

Yes

Class Library

Yes

Console Application

Yes

Windows Control Library

Yes

Web Control Library

Yes

Windows Service

Yes

Web Site

No

See Also

Tasks

How to: Access an XML Web Service in Managed Code

Reference

SoapHttpClientProtocol
ArgumentException

Concepts

Accessing Application Web Services

Other Resources

Accessing XML Web Services in Managed Code