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Get Started Using C# with Bing Ads API

To get started developing Bing Ads API applications with a .NET language, you can start with the provided examples or follow one of the application walkthroughs for a Web or Desktop application. The examples have been developed with the Bing Ads .NET SDK and Visual Studio Community. Your custom configuration may vary.

You will need user credentials with access to Microsoft Advertising either in production or sandbox. For the production environment you will need a production developer token. All sandbox clients can use the universal sandbox developer token i.e., BBD37VB98. For more information, please see Get Started With the Bing Ads API and Sandbox.

To authenticate via OAuth, you must also register an application and get the corresponding client identifier. You also need to take note of the client secret and redirect URI if you are developing a web application. For more details about registering an application in production and the authorization code grant flow, see Authentication with OAuth and Authentication With the SDKs. Although in production you must use your own application ID (a.k.a. client ID), all Microsoft Advertising customers can use the public "Tutorial Sample App" client ID in sandbox i.e., 00001111-aaaa-2222-bbbb-3333cccc4444. For more information, please see Sandbox.

Install the SDK

Install the Bing Ads .NET SDK through NuGet, either through the Manage NuGet Packages user interface, or through the Package Manager Console. For information about installing NuGet, see https://docs.nuget.org.

Note

The Bing Ads .NET SDK supports .NET Standard 2.0. You can choose from a variety of platforms e.g., .NET Core or .NET Framework 4.6.1. The Bing Ads API examples are developed via Visual Studio Community 2017 and target .NET Framework 4.7.1. The .NET Standard 2.0 and Bing Ads .NET SDK do not support .NET Framework versions lower than 4.6.1. For more information on .NET Standard and how it relates to other .NET frameworks, refer to this article on .NET Standard.

NuGet Package Manager Console

  1. Click on Tools -> NuGet Package Manager -> Package Manager Console.
  2. Choose the default project where you want the SDK installed, and then within the console command line, type Install-Package Microsoft.BingAds.SDK.
  3. If you do not already have references to System.ServiceModel.Primitives 4.4.1, System.ServiceModel.Http 4.4.1, and System.ServiceModel.ConfigurationManager 4.4.1, type Install-Package System.ServiceModel.Primitives -Version 4.4.1, Install-Package System.ServiceModel.Http -Version 4.4.1, and Install-Package System.Configuration.ConfigurationManager -Version 4.4.1.

Walkthroughs

Once you have the Bing Ads .NET SDK installed, you can either browse the Bing Ads API Code Examples in C# or follow one of the application walkthroughs for a Web or Desktop application.

Customizing HTTP client

You may want to customize the HTTP client used by Bing Ads .NET SDK to change some standard parameters such as HTTP timeout, proxy configuration, or other settings.

To do so, you can create a custom class inherited from HttpClientProvider and set GlobalSettings.HttpClientProvider to an instance of that class before making service calls. For example:

class MyHttpClientProvider : HttpClientProvider 
{ 
    protected override void ConfigureHttpClient(HttpClient httpClient, Type serviceType, ApiEnvironment apiEnvironment) 
    { 
        // override default timeout 
        httpClient.Timeout = TimeSpan.FromMinutes(5); 
    } 
} 

GlobalSettings.HttpClientProvider = new MyHttpClientProvider(); 

Logging service calls

Starting from Bing Ads .NET SDK 13.0.20, to enable logging request and response messages, you can set the BINGADS_ConsoleLoggerMinLevel environment variable to Verbose:

Environment.SetEnvironmentVariable("BINGADS_ConsoleLoggerMinLevel", "Verbose"); 

You can also enable the same logging using the BingAdsEventListener class:

BingAdsEventListener.CreateConsoleLogger(EventLevel.Verbose).KeepActive();

You can also create a new BingAdsEventListener instance to provide a custom logger implementation. For example:

new BingAdsEventListener(EventLevel.Verbose, bingAdsEvent => MyLogger.LogVerbose(bingAdsEvent.GetDescription())).KeepActive();

See Also

Bing Ads API Client Libraries
Bing Ads API Code Examples
Bing Ads API Web Service Addresses
Handling Service Errors and Exceptions
Sandbox