vote up 1 vote down star

In C# you can create getter/setters in a simpler way than other languages:

public int FooBar { get; set; }

This creates an internal private variable which you can't address directly, with the external property 'FooBar' to access it directly.

My question is - how often do you see this abused? It seems like it has a high potential to violate encapsulation best-practices often. Don't get me wrong, I use it as appropriate, and partial variations of it for read-only write-only types of properties, but what are your unpleasant experiences with it from other authors in your code base?

Clarification: the intended definition of abuse would indeed be creating such a property when private variables are appropriate.

flag

Abused how exactly? the only abusive thing I can think of is putting a method's worth of work into a property, and that's fairly minor – annakata Jul 2 at 9:31
1  
Could you give an example where you think the use of automatic properties is not appropriate? – divo Jul 2 at 9:31
1  
@annakata - which you can't do with an automatically implemented property. – Marc Gravell Jul 2 at 9:32
Re clarification - if you create a public property when you meant a private field... then that is just a coding error. You might as well ask "how is while(true) {}" abused? You can have private auto-props, if you really want... – Marc Gravell Jul 2 at 9:38
@marc - ha, quite true :P – annakata Jul 2 at 9:40

4 Answers

vote up 10 vote down check

I've seen it abused (in my opinion). In particular, when the developer would normally write:

private readonly int foo;
public int Foo
{ 
    get 
    { 
        return foo;
    }
}

they'll sometimes write:

public int Foo { get; private set; }

Yes, it's shorter. Yes, from outside the class it has the same appearance - but I don't view these as the same thing, as the latter form allows the property to be set elsewhere in the same class. It also means that there's no warning if the property isn't set in the constructor, and the field isn't readonly for the CLR. These are subtle differences, but just going for the second form because it's simpler and ignoring the differences feels like abuse to me, even if it's minor.

I'm really, really hoping we get a proper "readonly automatically implemented property" some time...

link|flag
Good point. Would also like to see readonly for automatic properties – BengtBe Jul 2 at 9:35
Interesting point - I'd never thought of that. – ChrisF Jul 2 at 9:37
I've seen this commonly as well, but your take is interesting. – dxmio Jul 2 at 9:37
Its not nearly the same, cause you marked the local variable foo as readonly. If it is readonly, it can't be set anywhere other as on first initialization, if not, it can be accessed from elsewhere in the same class - like the latter form of you. – BeowulfOF Jul 2 at 9:38
@BeowulfOF - that being the point... – Marc Gravell Jul 2 at 9:39
show 2 more comments
vote up 0 vote down

I don't think automatic properties are any worse than regular properties in regards to encapsulation.

If you mean that some developers use public automatic properties instead private fields then this is of course wrong and breaks encapsulation..

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I haven't seen any abuse of it. And to be honest, I don't really see what you mean, as I can't see how this syntax could be abused.

link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

There is no "abuse" in simply not writing the field manually; and it is good to encourage all access via the property (not directly to the field) anyway!

The biggest problem I know of is with binary serialization, where it gets a bit tricky to change back to a regular field without making it version-incompatible - but then... use a different serializer ;-p

It would be nice if there was a "proper" readonly variant, and if you didn't need to use :this() ctor-chaining on structs, but.... meh!

link|flag
I agree. I think Properties and can help extend things later on (especially if they are public and you expect someone else to use your classes). – Ian Jul 2 at 10:53
Follow the bouncing instruction pointer here ( ;) ): Automatic properties, you can't get to their backing stores. If it's eadonly then there's no way to give it a value at all. So thus it would be pointless... – RCIX Nov 13 at 11:08

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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