4

I am setting the property of a class like that

public string Name { get; set; }

But i can also set the property like that

public string Name { get; private set; }

I want to know the difference between these? and what scope they have?

3 Answers 3

5

It means you cannot set this property from class instance. Only member of same class can set it. Hence for outsiders this property becomes read-only property.

class Foo
{
    public string Name1 { get; set; }

    public string Name2 { get; private set; }

    public string Name3 { get { return Name2; } set { Name2 = value; }
}

Then

Foo f = new Foo();

f.Name1 = ""; // No Error

f.Name2 = ""; // Error.

f.Name3 = ""; // No Error

Name3 will set value in Name2 but setting value in Name2 directly is not possible.

and what scope they have?

Since Name1 and Name3 property are public so they and their get and set methods are available everywhere.

Name3 is also public but its set is private so property and get method will be available everywhere. Set method scope is limited to class only (private access modifier has scope inside entity where it is defined).

0
3

For the case public string Name { get; private set; } Using private set means that the property is ReadOnly from the outside. Its useful when you have a read only property and don't want to explicitly declare the backing variable.

public string Name { get; private set; } it is same as :

private string _Name;
public string Name
{
    get { return _Name; }
    private set { _Name = value; }
}
1
  • The latter two things are not actually the same. From within the class, this.Name = "bill" is valid with the first implementation, but not the second.
    – kdbanman
    Jul 17, 2015 at 18:04
3

The first one will have Set and Get methods available out of your class. The second one will have a Get method available out of your class but the Set method will only be available within your class. This usually denotes read only behaviour.

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