10

I have a class called LocalConstants....

 public static class LocalConstants {
    public static string DM_PATH = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["DMQueue"];
    public static string PROJECT_PATH = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["MSQueue"];
 }

When trying to access this class in my main program I am getting a null reference exception. Anything from ConfigurationManager.AppSettings[ is always null. But if I write

  //The value is returned fine 
  string bo=ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["MSQueue"];

this compiles fine but is always null and throws a NullRefexception

   string moomoo = LocalConstants.PROJECT_PATH;

The exception is The type initializer for 'TestCodeOutOnSide.LocalConstants' threw an exception.

The innerException is the basic Object reference not set to an instance of an object.

Even if I change the PROJECT_PATH to

public static readonly string PROJECT_PATH = @"FORMATNAME:DIRECT=OS:serus-nickl\RMQDEV";

I get the same exception

Any ideas?

2
  • Is LocalConstants in the same project as the app.config?
    – IAbstract
    May 15, 2012 at 18:52
  • Yes everything is in the same project May 15, 2012 at 18:53

4 Answers 4

5

To begin with, if you are doing this to provide some sort of performance benefit then you should know that these are cached. See ConfigurationManager.AppSettings Caching, to remove any.

Second the issue is most likely that Static field initialization does not work how you expect it to. So your code as written provides no guarantee of that ConfigurationManager.AppSettings has been run. From the linked article sample code:

might produce either the output:

Init A
Init B
1 1

or the output:

Init B
Init A
1 1

[EDIT per OP comment]

There must be something else involved as:

public static class LocalConstants
{
    public static string DM_PATH = "DMQueue";
    public static string PROJECT_PATH = "MSQueue";
}


class Program
{
    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        string moomoo = LocalConstants.PROJECT_PATH;

        Console.WriteLine(moomoo);
    }
}

works for me.

[Edit 2 - Fro those who come after]

It looks like The type initializer for ‘SomeClass’ threw an exception can be a case where

But when it's called by the WPF designer, the "application" is Visual Studio, which (presumably) doesn't have the appropriate connection strings in its .config file;

The fix for that author was:

moving the instantiation of my Entity Data Model into a property

9
  • Any suggestions on a better way to approach this? May 15, 2012 at 19:29
  • @NickLaMarca Why do you not like string moomoo = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["MSQueue"];? What are you trying to accomplish with your LocalConstants class? May 15, 2012 at 20:00
  • Requirement is no magic strings or ConfigurationManager references in code. Wanted all in 1 file. I just took all the strings in the ConfigurationManager and directly put them in the LocalConstants class and it still throwing an exception and returning null May 15, 2012 at 20:08
  • The type initializer for 'TestCodeOutOnSide.LocalConstants' threw an exception. May 15, 2012 at 20:10
  • @NickLaMarca Those strings are not Magic, they name things you are using, like a CONNECTION_STRING, and what have you. How is having your own file any different from using the existing ConfigurationManager? And what does "strings in the ConfigurationManager and directly put them in the LocalConstants" mean? May 15, 2012 at 20:12
1

Why don't try something like:

   public static string ProjectPath 
   { 
       get 
       { 
           return ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["MSQueue"]; 
       } 
   }
1
  • Please provide a description / explanation of the code snippet.
    – RITZ XAVI
    Nov 23, 2016 at 17:03
0

I called this

public static string Environment = AppEnvironmentVariable.ToUpper() != "PROD" ? "***FROM " + AppEnvironmentVariable.ToUpper() + "** " : "";

Before this

public static string AppEnvironmentVariable = "DEV";

In the LocalConstants file which broke it because of what Josh said about Static field initialization

-1

You could try making them readonly

public static readonly string PROJECT_PATH = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["MSQueue"];

readonly fields can be lazy-loaded

0

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