To elaborate on Denis Mazourick's answer about using default optional parameters in C# 4.0 and how the default values get compiled into the consuming class, try this.
Create a class library with the following code and build it:
public class ClassWithDefaultParameters {
public string Msg { get; set; }
public ClassWithDefaultParameters(string msg = "Hello World") {
Msg = msg;
}
}
public class ClassWithConstructorOverloads {
public string Msg { get; set; }
public ClassWithConstructorOverloads(string msg) {
Msg = msg;
}
public ClassWithConstructorOverloads() : this("Hello World") {}
}
Now create a console application and reference the dll you just built (not the project, but the actual dll). Place this in your code and build the console application.
static void Main() {
var cwdp = new ClassWithDefaultParameters();
var cwco = new ClassWithConstructorOverloads();
Console.WriteLine(cwdp.Msg);
Console.WriteLine(cwco.Msg);
}
When you run the application, the output will be as you expected:
Hello World
Hello World
Now open up the class library, and change both "Hello World" in "Hello Europe". Recompile the library and copy the dll to the output folder of the console application. Do not rebuild the console application.
When you run the console application again, the output will be:
Hello World
Hello Europe
Probably not what you expected! It's not until you rebuild the console application that both lines will print Hello Europe
.
I didn't know this and I think I won't use the default parameters because of this. What's worse is that Microsoft doesn't mention this on the MSDN page.