There is one obvious mistake in the code you show, and probably a second one, depending on what you are really doing.
The easy one is in the line
public: static int[] elem = new int[10] ;
In C# access modifiers (like public
, private
, protected
etc.) are not followed by a colon (:
), so the correct syntax is
public static int[] elem = new int[10];
But your first line:
panou_medii->Visible = true ;
Here you use a dereferencing/member access operator (->
). This operator can only be used with pointers in an unsafe
context.
This is not very common in C#, and since you said you are working on a form, I guess it's not what you intended.
To access properties of a class instance in C#, we use the .
operator. Visible
in your example is probably a property of a Control
and panou_medii
is an instance of that Control
(or precisely a variable containing a reference of that instance).
So to access the Visible
of set instance use
panou_medii.Visible = true;
If you are getting more errors now, you will need to show some more of your code. For a start: if the two lines you showed are following each other directly, there's definitly something wrong. The first line is a statement that can only exist inside a method. The second line is a member declaration that cannot be contained in a method. (If you declare a variable inside a method, you don't use access modifiers like public
).