2

I have an automatic property

public int GearCount { get; set; }

when i try to initialize it like this-

Tandem t = new Tandem(GearCount = 5);

It gives an error as below

The name 'GearCount' does not exist in the current context

Whats wrong here ? Also if i do normal intantiation it works fine. Tandem t = new Tandem();

3
  • 8
    Did you mean Tandem t = new Tandem() { GearCount = 5 }; ?
    – C.Evenhuis
    Apr 6, 2010 at 14:23
  • 4
    What is the relation between GearCount and HasToolkit?
    – Gorpik
    Apr 6, 2010 at 14:25
  • sorry for typo. i have replaced hastoolkit with Gearcount. Apr 6, 2010 at 14:31

3 Answers 3

10

We need the rest of your code

You show us an auto-property called HasToolkit but the problem you're having has nothing to do with HasToolkit.

It doesn't look like you have an auto-property on your Tandem class called GearCount.

With the question fixed, it looks like you might just have some syntax issues.

If your Tandem class looks like:

public class Tandem
{    
   public bool HasToolkit {get; set;}

   public int GearCount {get; set;}
}

Then your initialization code would be:

Tandem t = new Tandem() { GearCount = 5 };

Or:

Tandem t = new Tandem() { GearCount = 5, HasToolkit = true };
1
  • No problem. Updated now that you changed the question around. Apr 6, 2010 at 14:39
2

The property you have declared is not the same name nor type as the one you are trying to set in the initializer. In addition, you need to use braces instead of parentheses when you want to use initializers:

var t = new Tandem{ HasToolKit = true };
1
  • thanks !! my mistake, it was a typo.. have fixed the question now. Apr 6, 2010 at 14:39
1

That's because the property is named HasToolKit and is of type bool, not named GearCount with a type of int.

To that end, you also seem to be mixing constructor and property initializer syntax. What you'd want in the calling case is:

Tandem t = new Tandem {GearCount = 5};

The definition of Tandem would need to have something of the sort of:

public int GearCount { get; set; }

Not quite sure what HasToolKit means in the scheme of things.

2
  • thank u so much !!!! I highly appriciate ur help . like u said i was actually mixing up the constructor syntax and property initialization syntax Apr 6, 2010 at 14:37
  • Glad to be of help. Happy coding! Apr 6, 2010 at 16:16

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