I have a rather lengthy constructor which is performing various initialisation work, and as such I wanted to factor out some of this work into some functions. This led to me wonder whether I should make the said functions instance or static methods. I understand the risk of calling a virtual function from a constructor but I also think there is something not right about calling an instance method on an object which is not 100% instantiated. Surely this is a contradiction in terms.
I'd be interested in peoples opinion on this matter. I also found that by using a static method to return an initialised variable I could make the member target read-only. Here's a simplified illustration of my scenario.
public class A
{
private readonly string _foo;
public A()
{
_foo = InitialiseFoo();
}
private static InitialiseFoo()
{
// Do stuff
return new string ("foo");
}
}