As I know Constructors of parent class is called first and then child Class.But why In Case of static Constructor It executes from derived Class first and then Child Class?
namespace ConsoleApplication1
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
Child t = new Child();
}
}
class Parent
{
public Parent()
{
Console.WriteLine("Parent Instance Constructor");
Console.ReadKey();
}
static Parent()
{
Console.WriteLine("Parent Static Constructor");
Console.ReadKey();
}
}
class Child : Parent
{
public Child()
{
Console.WriteLine("Child Instance Constructor");
Console.ReadKey();
}
static Child()
{
Console.WriteLine("Child Static Constructor");
Console.ReadKey();
}
}
}
Output:
Child Static Constructor
Parent Static Constructor
Parent Instance Constructor
Child Instance Constructor
Now As per Jeppe Stig Nielsen Suggestion when i have intialised static fields in constructors,it is running in following order
Output
Parent Static Constructor
Child Static Constructor
Parent Instance Constructor
Child Instance Constructor
class XyzParent
{
protected static int FieldOne;
protected int FieldTwo;
static XyzParent()
{
// !
FieldOne = 1;
Console.WriteLine("parent static");
}
internal XyzParent()
{
// !
FieldOne = 10;
// !
FieldTwo = 20;
Console.WriteLine("parent instance");
}
}
class XyzChild : XyzParent
{
static XyzChild()
{
// !
FieldOne = 100;
Console.WriteLine("child static");
}
internal XyzChild()
{
// !
FieldOne = 1000;
// !
FieldTwo = 2000;
Console.WriteLine("child instance");
}
}
Why such contradictory behaviour?
Parent
two fields, onestatic
one and one instance field. Then the constructors should assign to the fields. Static constructors can only assign to the static fields, but instance constructors can assign to both fields. Will the constructors run in the same order then?// !
, read my answer, run your code again, and see if you now understand what is going on here. There is no contradiction.