This has already been said, but I don't see any of the answers as being superclear.
The easiest way is to simply return a ReadOnlyCollection
private List<object> objs;
public ReadOnlyCollection<object> Objs {
get {
return objs.AsReadOnly();
}
}
The drawback with this is, that if you want to change your implementation later on, then some callers may already be dependent on the fact, that the collection provides random access. So a safer definition would be to just expose an IEnumerable
public IEnumerable<object> Objs {
get {
return objs.AsReadOnly();
}
}
Note that you don't have to call AsReadOnly() to compile this code. But if you don't, the caller my just cast the return value back to a List and modify your list.
// Bad caller code
var objs = YourClass.Objs;
var list = objs as List<object>;
list.Add(new object); // They have just modified your list.
The same is potential problem also exists with this solution
public IEnumerable<object> Objs {
get {
return objs.AsEnumerable();
}
}
So I would definately recommend that you call AsReadOnly() on you list, and return that value.