Having a friendly debate with a co-worker about this. We have some thoughts about this, but wondering what the SO crowd thinks about this?
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One reason is there is no CLR support for a readonly local. Readonly is translated into the CLR/CLI initonly opcode. This flag can only be applied to fields and has no meaning for a local. In fact, applying it to a local will likely produce unverifiable code. This doesn't mean that C# couldn't do this. But it would give two different meanings to the same language construct. The version for locals would have no CLR equivalent mapping. |
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I was that coworker and it wasn't friendly! (just kidding) I would not eliminate the feature because it's better to write short methods. It's a bit like saying you shouldn't use threads because they're hard. Give me the knife and let me be responsible for not cutting myself. Personally, I wanted another "var" type keyword like "inv" (invarient) or "rvar" to avoid clutter. I've been studying F# as of late and find the immutable thing appealing. Never knew Java had this. |
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Addressing Jared's answer, it would probably just have to be a compile-time feature - the compiler would prohibit you from writing to the variable after the initial declaration (which would have to include an assignment). Can I see value in this? Potentially - but not a lot, to be honest. If you can't easily tell whether or not a variable is going to be assigned elsewhere in the method, then your method is too long. I'd rather not see a language feature which reduces the impact of spaghetti methods - the developers responsible should simplify the methods instead. For what it's worth, Java has this feature and I've very rarely seen it used - and where it is used, it gives me an impression of clutter rather than useful information. |
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Readonly means the only place the instance variable can be set is in the constructor. When declaring a variable locally it doesn't have an instance (it's just in scope), and it can't be touched by the constructor. |
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I think that's because a function that has a readonly variable may never be called, and there's probably something about it going out of scope, and when would you need to? |
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