There's a lot of advice out there that you shouldn't expose your fields publically, and instead use trivial properties. I see it over & over.
I understand the arguments, but I don't think it's good advice in most cases.
Does anyone have an example of a time when it really mattered? When writing a trivial property made something important possible in the future (or when failing to use one got them in to real trouble)?
EDIT: The DataBinding argument is correct, but not very interesting. It's a bug in the DataBinding code that it won't accept public fields. So, we have to write properties to work around that bug, not because properties are a wise class design choice.
EDIT: To be clear, I'm looking for real-world examples, not theory. A time when it really mattered.
EDIT: The ability to set a breakpoint on the setter seems valuable. Designing my code for the debugger is unfortunate: I'd rather the debugger get smarter, but given the debugger we have, I'll take this ability. Good stuff.
readonly. You're suggesting to not just write extra code at the member sight, but unit tests for a behaviorless part of your problem. That quite some code bloat (really bad for readability and maintainability) for a simple field - of which you may have thousands in a program. – Eamon Nerbonne Feb 9 '11 at 10:52