I thought of solution below because the collection is very very small. But what if it was big?

private Dictionary<string, OfTable> _folderData = new Dictionary<string, OfTable>();

public Dictionary<string, OfTable> FolderData
{
    get { return new Dictionary<string,OfTable>(_folderData); }
}

With List you can make:

public class MyClass
{
    private List<int> _items = new List<int>();

    public IList<int> Items
    {
        get { return _items.AsReadOnly(); }
    }
}

That would be nice!

Thanks in advance, Cheers & BR - Matti

NOW WHEN I THINK THE OBJECTS IN COLLECTION ARE IN HEAP. SO MY SOLUTION DOES NOT PREVENT THE CALLER TO MODIFY THEM!!! CAUSE BOTH Dictionary s CONTAIN REFERENCES TO SAME OBJECT. DOES THIS APPLY TO List EXAMPLE ABOVE?

class OfTable
{
    private int _table;
    private List<int> _classes;
    private string _label;

    public OfTable()
    {
        _classes = new List<int>();
    }

    public int Table
    {
        get { return _table; }
        set { _table = value; }
    }

    public List<int> Classes
    {
        get { return _classes; }
        set { _classes = value; }
    }

    public string Label
    {
        get { return _label; }
        set { _label = value; }
    }
}

so how to make this immutable??

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75% accept rate
possible duplicate of stackoverflow.com/questions/35002/… – Marcelo Cantos Apr 7 '10 at 9:52
Ignore my vote to close as duplicate. On rereading, the question is not quite the same. Sorry. – Marcelo Cantos Apr 7 '10 at 9:53
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2 Answers

up vote 4 down vote accepted

It's not difficult to roll your own ReadOnlyDictionary<K,V> wrapper class. Something like this:

public sealed class ReadOnlyDictionary<TKey, TValue> : IDictionary<TKey, TValue>
{
    private readonly IDictionary<TKey, TValue> _dictionary;

    public ReadOnlyDictionary(IDictionary<TKey, TValue> dictionary)
    {
        if (dictionary == null)
            throw new ArgumentNullException("dictionary");

        _dictionary = dictionary;
    }

    public bool ContainsKey(TKey key)
    {
        return _dictionary.ContainsKey(key);
    }

    public int Count
    {
        get { return _dictionary.Count; }
    }

    public IEnumerator<KeyValuePair<TKey, TValue>> GetEnumerator()
    {
        return _dictionary.GetEnumerator();
    }

    public ICollection<TKey> Keys
    {
        get { return _dictionary.Keys; }
    }

    public bool TryGetValue(TKey key, out TValue value)
    {
        return _dictionary.TryGetValue(key, out value);
    }

    public ICollection<TValue> Values
    {
        get { return _dictionary.Values; }
    }

    public TValue this[TKey key]    // Item
    {
        get { return _dictionary[key]; }
    }

    #region IDictionary<TKey, TValue> Explicit Interface Implementation

    void IDictionary<TKey, TValue>.Add(TKey key, TValue value)
    {
        throw new NotSupportedException("Dictionary is read-only.");
    }

    bool IDictionary<TKey, TValue>.Remove(TKey key)
    {
        throw new NotSupportedException("Dictionary is read-only.");
    }

    TValue IDictionary<TKey, TValue>.this[TKey key]    // Item
    {
        get { return _dictionary[key]; }
        set { throw new NotSupportedException("Dictionary is read-only."); }
    }

    #endregion

    #region ICollection<T> Explicit Interface Implementation

    void ICollection<KeyValuePair<TKey, TValue>>.Add(KeyValuePair<TKey, TValue> item)
    {
        throw new NotSupportedException("Collection is read-only.");
    }

    void ICollection<KeyValuePair<TKey, TValue>>.Clear()
    {
        throw new NotSupportedException("Collection is read-only.");
    }

    bool ICollection<KeyValuePair<TKey, TValue>>.Contains(KeyValuePair<TKey, TValue> item)
    {
        return _dictionary.Contains(item);
    }

    void ICollection<KeyValuePair<TKey, TValue>>.CopyTo(KeyValuePair<TKey, TValue>[] array, int arrayIndex)
    {
        _dictionary.CopyTo(array, arrayIndex);
    }

    bool ICollection<KeyValuePair<TKey, TValue>>.IsReadOnly
    {
        get { return true; }
    }

    bool ICollection<KeyValuePair<TKey, TValue>>.Remove(KeyValuePair<TKey, TValue> item)
    {
        throw new NotSupportedException("Collection is read-only.");
    }

    #endregion

    #region IEnumerable Explicit Interface Implementation

    IEnumerator IEnumerable.GetEnumerator()
    {
        return ((IEnumerable)_dictionary).GetEnumerator();
    }

    #endregion
}

If you're using C#3 or later then you could knock-up a matching AsReadOnly extension method too:

public static class ReadOnlyDictionaryHelper
{
    public static ReadOnlyDictionary<TKey, TValue> AsReadOnly<TKey, TValue>(this IDictionary<TKey, TValue> dictionary)
    {
        var temp = dictionary as ReadOnlyDictionary<TKey, TValue>;
        return temp ?? new ReadOnlyDictionary<TKey, TValue>(dictionary);
    }
}

And then return the read-only wrapper from your property:

// in C#2
return new ReadOnlyDictionary<string, OfTable>(_folderData);

// in C#3 or later
return _folderData.AsReadOnly();
link|improve this answer
thanks! yes, that is true. lots of code... i saw similar implementation here in StackOverflow. I gave u 1 up, but making a wrapper is not what I want. sorry 'bout being picky. if nobody can give answer with shorter code i accept it. cheers mate! – matti Apr 7 '10 at 10:02
@matti: Yes a lot of code, but see other answer: this is now done for you in the framework, and even in downlevel versions this is fully reusable code so you only need to write it once. – Richard Apr 7 '10 at 10:09
threre is a problem: the objects contained can be changed. but there is maybe nothing to do about. it would be nice that both collection and objects inside would be readonly... i'm not making a code library, but only a simple program so any of this doesn't really matter. I just wanna learn... – matti Apr 7 '10 at 10:12
@richard: true, true! – matti Apr 7 '10 at 10:13
@matti: There's not really any straightforward way of preventing changes to the objects stored in the dictionary (assuming that they're reference types). If they're your own custom objects (eg, OfTable) then perhaps you could consider making them immutable. – LukeH Apr 7 '10 at 10:21
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Use ReadOnlyCollection<T> class.

An instance of the ReadOnlyCollection generic class is always read-only. A collection that is read-only is simply a collection with a wrapper that prevents modifying the collection; therefore, if changes are made to the underlying collection, the read-only collection reflects those changes. See Collection for a modifiable version of this class.

--EDIT--

Checkout a trivial dictionary wrapper here. And A Generic Read-Only Dictionary by Richard Carr.

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1  
not for Dictionary! – matti Apr 7 '10 at 9:56
@Matti: Just so it may help, please see my edit in response to your comment. – KMån Apr 7 '10 at 10:57
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