I'm having problems getting an instance of a class to a function, without initializing it beforehand (the way this library has been set up, when creating the class instance, events are triggered, which I do not want to happen initially).
TopClass TC = new TopClass();
and a member of TC (dostuff) can be accessed from class AClass...
AClass myClass = TC.dostuff(parameters);
a method is defined as:
public void MyMethod(Aclass myClass, bool value) {/* */}
and the calling method as
bool val = true; //or false, depending on what I need
MyMethod(AClass myclass = TC.dostuff(parameters), val); // Is this really bad?
I can't initialize it within MyMethod without triggering the events, and I can't pass a class instance as null, which leaves me with the above. At least this way I can either stop or start the desired events inside MyMethod, depending on the bool value. What is really going on here? (apart from probably not being good OOP design). Would creating a reference to AClass be helpful in such a scenario?