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When organizing a project where should I put the provider interfaces which are used in MEF? Currently I just have them in the same project as everything else but it seems like it might desirable for me to extract them into a separate dll such that it was a very small dll and would easily be linked to by others attempting to write extensions. What is good practise for this?

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As with any plug-in/extension model, you should put your "contracts" (the interfaces a plug-in author should be implementing) in an assembly separate from your application.

That way you can make that assembly available to plug-in authors without having to give them the entire application - useful if it's a commercial app that you need to license separately.

MEF Preview 5 introduces the ability to export an interface (ie add an [Export] attribute to an interface) such that any implementor of that interface is automatically exported. That means that plug-in authors don't even need to know about MEF - they just implement your interface and they're automatically a MEF extension.

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Exporting an interface works well if you only ever import one of that type. The problem is if you want to use two of that type in different parts of your application, then you need a contract name anyway, so you'll need the export statement, right? – Scott W. May 15 at 1:29
Yes, if you need to import two different implementations of the same interface then you'd need to differentiate them somehow. Requiring an Export attribute on the implementation is an easy way to do that. You could probably use export metadata in some way too, but I haven't played with that at all. – Matt Hamilton May 15 at 2:01
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Originally MEF was going to implement duck typing, which would mean you wouldn't need a common assembly, but apparently this proved too difficult.

I'm putting them all in a common assembly, along with some useful abstract base classes that can be used to help implement the interfaces.

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Interesting. I arrived at the same pattern myself, independently. Only my interface isn't an interface, it's an abstract class, because I ended up having a universal, final function as real code. – JCCyC Jul 17 at 16:54

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