Is this a proper way to declare immutable structs?

public struct Pair
{
    public readonly int x;
    public readonly int y;

    // Constructor and stuff
}

I can't think of why this would run into problems, but I just wanted to ask to make sure.

In this example, I used ints. What if I used a class instead, but that class is also immutable, like so? That should work fine too, right?

public struct Pair
{
    public readonly (immutableClass) x;
    public readonly (immutableClass) y;

    // Constructor and stuff
}

(Aside: I understand that using Properties is more generalizable and allows changing, but this struct is intended literally to just store two values. I'm just interested in the immutability question here.)

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60% accept rate
readonly properties/members can only be set from within the constructor (at the latest). They can't be set with the property initialization-syntax. – pst May 19 '11 at 18:32
You may want to check Immutable types: understand their benefits and use them – YetAnotherUser May 19 '11 at 18:34
readonly only affects the assignment operator. It does not have as strong semantics as C++'s const keyword. – Etienne de Martel May 19 '11 at 18:47
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3 Answers

up vote 18 down vote accepted

If you're going to use structs, it is a best practice to make them immutable.

Making all the fields readonly is a great way to help (1) document that the struct is immutable, and (2) prevent accidental mutations.

However, there is one wrinkle, which actually in a strange coincidence I was planning on blogging about next week. That is: readonly on a struct field is a lie. One expects that a readonly field cannot change, but of course it can. "readonly" on a struct field is the declaration writing cheques with no money in its account. A struct doesn't own its storage, and it is that storage which can mutate.

For example, let's take your struct:

public struct Pair
{
    public readonly int x;
    public readonly int y;
    public Pair(int x, int y)
    {
        this.x = x;
        this.y = y;
    }
    public void M(ref Pair p)
    {
        int oldX = x;
        int oldY = y;
        // Something happens here
        Debug.Assert(x == oldX);
        Debug.Assert(y == oldY);
    }
}

Is there anything that can happen at "something happens here" that causes the debug assertions to be violated? Sure.

    public void M(ref Pair p)
    {
        int oldX = this.x;
        int oldY = this.y;
        p = new Pair(0, 0);
        Debug.Assert(this.x == oldX);
        Debug.Assert(this.y == oldY);
    }
...
    Pair myPair = new Pair(10, 20);
    myPair.M(ref myPair);

And now what happens? The assertion is violated! "this" and "p" refer to the same storage location. The storage location is mutated, and so the contents of "this" are mutated because they are the same thing. The struct is not able to enforce the read-only-ness of x and y because the struct doesn't own the storage; the storage is a local variable that is free to mutate as much as it wants.

You cannot rely on the invariant that a readonly field in a struct is never observed to change; the only thing you can rely on is that you can't write code that directly changes it. But with a little sneaky work like this you can indirectly change it all you want.

See also Joe Duffy's excellent blog article on this issue:

http://www.bluebytesoftware.com/blog/2010/07/01/WhenIsAReadonlyFieldNotReadonly.aspx

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4  
It's amazing how many edge-cases you demonstrate that make me think, "Who would even do that?" – Joel B Fant May 19 '11 at 19:15
I discovered that you can do the same sort of thing with StructLayout.Explicit when I was debugging somebody else's code. – Jim Mischel May 19 '11 at 19:51
@Jim: Correct; you can overlay a readonly field and a read-write field into the same storage no problem. It's weird, but it is legal. – Eric Lippert May 19 '11 at 20:12
2  
@Joel: Suppose we come up with a way to multiply pairs, but it sometimes fails. So you have "bool MultiplyBy(Pair x, out Pair result)" as a method which multiplies "this" by x, returns the success or failure as a bool, and writes the result into the aliased variable. Now you have a pair and you want to square it and replace the previous value with the square, so you say "myPair.MultiplyBy(myPair, out myPair)". And boom, you've put yourself into this awful trap. Each step along the way was pretty reasonable, but they add up to something horrid. – Eric Lippert May 19 '11 at 20:15
Let me see if I understand what happened: You passed it in with the ref modifier, which meant that rather than passing in a copy of the value of the variable, you passed in the variable itself. But since the struct is contained within the variable, as opposed to the variable containing a reference to the object (as for classes), overwriting this variable effectively overwrote the struct. I don't understand how this would turn out differently with properties though instead of readonly fields. – Mike May 19 '11 at 20:50
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That would make it immutable indeed. I suppose you better add a constructor though.
If all its members are immutable too, this would make it entirely immutable. These can be classes or simple values.

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Sure, I just left it out for simplicity. – Mike May 19 '11 at 18:33
And what about if they were immutable classes rather than ints? Should be fine too? – Mike May 19 '11 at 18:35
B^) A constructor would be helpful. Unless you always wanted x and y to be zero. – Nicholas Carey May 19 '11 at 18:35
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The compiler will forbid assignment to readonly fields as well as read-only properties.

I recommend using read-only properties mostly for public interface reasons and data-binding (which won't work on fields). If it were my project I would require that if the struct/class is public. If it's going to be internal to an assembly or private to a class, I could overlook it at first and refactor them to read-only properties later.

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2  
The compiler is capable of detecting assignments to readonly fields at compile-time and will raise a compiler error if one is detected. – dtb May 19 '11 at 18:38
Good to know. Edited my answer. – Joel B Fant May 19 '11 at 19:12
The runtime will enforce the readonly semantics, too. That is, if x is a readonly field of type MyStruct, and s is an instance of MyStruct, then dynamic d = s; d.x = 42; will throw an exception. – Jim Mischel May 19 '11 at 20:36
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