2

I am having trouble with this piece of code and I can't figure out how to get it to work. I can't figure out what the problem is as to me it looks like it should work. The string array called m_nameList on both places are marked as 'An object reference required for the non static feild, method, or property 'Solutionname.classname.m_nameList'

the code:

    public static bool CheckVacantSeats(int seatNumber)
    {            
        if (m_nameList[seatNumber] == null)
      {
          return true;
      }
      return false;
    }

m_nameList is an array that is declared in an constructor before this static bool:

     public SeatManager(int maxNumberOfSeats)
    {
        m_totNumOfSeats = maxNumberOfSeats;
        m_nameList = new string[m_totNumOfSeats];
        m_priceList = new double[m_totNumOfSeats];
    }   

I am calling the CheckVacantSeat from another class with this:

  bool validSeats = SeatManager.CheckVacantSeats(seatNumber, m_nameList);    

I can't figure out what is wrong with it. So i need some help figuring out why m_nameList does not work for me?

Thanks in advance!!

//Regards

1
  • Standard error: rewrite if (x) return true; else return false; to return x;always. Jul 27, 2012 at 16:13

4 Answers 4

5

The problem is that you have marked your method as static. Since it is static, it has "no" state, and cannot access class members which are not marked as static.

You can mark m_nameList as static, but that means that it's value is shared across all reads and writes. m_nameList looks like a simple lookup table so maybe this is what you want?

Recommended reading is static and Static Classes and Static Members.

2
  • Exactly, how would it know which instance of a member to access? Jul 27, 2012 at 16:09
  • (help you with a better word) Reads and Writes? Jul 27, 2012 at 16:25
1

Your function is static, but your variables are not static.

1

Well your call is wrong for a start, your method CheckVacantSeats only accepts one parameter so you can't call it with two??!

CheckVacantSeats(int seatNumber)
SeatManager.CheckVacantSeats(seatNumber, m_nameList); 

your method is also static so there's no point having a constructor.

I think what your after is:

SeatManager seatManager = new SeatManager(maxNumberOfSeats);
seatManager.CheckVacantSeats(seatNumber);

Also

public bool CheckVacantSeats(int seatNumber)
    {            
        if (m_nameList[seatNumber] == null)
      {
          return true;
      }
      return false;
    }
1

You are mixing two concepts: an instance initialized with a constructor, and a static class with static members. You cannot expect a static member method to access a non-static field. I guess your m_nameList field is static as well, otherwise your code wouldn't even compile. You should choose either way:

  1. make all SeatManager's members non-static;
  2. turn the SeatManager class into a static class having all members static.

Since you need to initialize the SeatManager with the total number of seats, the better way seems to be No. (1). Then instead of SeatManager.CheckVacantSeats() you would call an instance like mySeatManager.CheckVacantSeats(). Even in case there will always be just one instance of SeatManager — a singleton — this approach is better. With a singleton, you could end up with a public static SeatManager Instance { get; set; } property in SeatManager and work with it like this: SeatManager.Instace.CheckVacantSeats(). This is usually called a singleton pattern.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.