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I'm a brand-newbie to C#, albeit not programming, so please forgive me if I mix things up a bit -- it's entirely unintentional. I've written a fairly simple class called "API" that has several public properties (accessors/mutators). I've also written a testing console application that uses reflection to get an alphabetically list of names & types of each property in the class:

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Text;
using System.Reflection;
using MyNamespace;		// Contains the API class

namespace ConsoleApplication1
{
	class Program
	{
		static void Main(string[] args)
		{
			Console.WriteLine("Hi");

			API api = new API(1234567890, "ABCDEFGHI");
			Type type = api.GetType();
			PropertyInfo[] props = type.GetProperties(BindingFlags.Public);

			// Sort properties alphabetically by name.
			Array.Sort(props, delegate(PropertyInfo p1, PropertyInfo p2) { 
				return p1.Name.CompareTo(p2.Name); 
			});

			// Display a list of property names and types.
			foreach (PropertyInfo propertyInfo in type.GetProperties())
			{
				Console.WriteLine("{0} [type = {1}]", propertyInfo.Name, propertyInfo.PropertyType);
			}
		}
	}
}

Now what I need is a method that loops through the properties and concats all the values together into a querystring. The problem is that I'd like to make this a function of the API class itself (if possible). I'm wondering if static constructors have something to do with solving this problem, but I've only been working with C# for a few days, and haven't been able to figure it out.

Any suggestions, ideas and/or code samples would be greatly appreciated!

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1 Answer

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This is unrelated to static constructors. You can do it with static methods:

class API {
    public static void PrintAPI() {
       Type type = typeof(API); // You don't need to create any instances.
       // rest of the code goes here.
    }
}

You can call it with:

API.PrintAPI();

You don't use any instances when you call static methods.

Update: To cache the result, you can either do it on first call or in an static initializer:

class API {
    private static List<string> apiCache;
    static API() {
        // fill `apiCache` with reflection stuff.
    }

    public static void PrintAPI() {
        // just print stuff from `apiCache`.
    } 
}
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That's exactly what I needed -- thank you so much! One more question: I came across a previous Stackoverflow question which suggested the following: "..when you are reflecting to find all the types that support a certain attribute, you have a perfect opportunity to use caching. That means you don't have to use reflection more than once at runtime." This seems to describe what I want to do, but I don't know what changes I need to make (and where) to only do this at load time. Any suggestions? – AspNyc Aug 30 at 2:58
1  
AspNyc, to create a cache all you have to do is store the results of the PrintApi method that Mehrdad described into a collection such as ArrayList or the generic version List<>. Where you store or persist the collection or cache is up to you. It could be inside the object you queried or the client code that initiated the query. – psasik Aug 30 at 3:10
Perfect -- thank you! – AspNyc Aug 30 at 5:05

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