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Would you consider this a singletonsingleton/singleton pattern?

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Imagine in the Global.asax.cs file I had an instance class as a private field, lets say like this:

private MyClass _myClass = new MyClass();

and I had on Global a static method called GetMyClass() that gets the current HttpApplication and returns that instance.

public static MyClass GetMyClass()
{
    return ((Global)HttpContext.Current.ApplicationInstance)._myClass;
}

So I could get the instance on the current requests httpapplication by calling Global.GetMyClass().

Keep in mind that there is more than 1 (Global)HttpApplication. There is an HttpApplication for each request and they are pooled/shared, so in the truest sense it is not a real singleton. But it does follow the pattern to a degree.

So as the question asked, would you consider this a Singleton, or at the very least the singleton pattern. ?

Would you say it should not be used? Would you discourage its use? Would you say its a possibly bad practice like a true singleton.

Could you see any problems that may arise from this type of usage scenario?

Or would you say its not a true singleton so its ok, and not bad practice. Would you recommend this as a semi quasi singleton where an instance per request is required? If not what other pattern/suggestion would you use/give?

Have you ever used anything such as this?

I have used this on past projects but I am unsure if its a practice I should stay away from. I have never had any issues in the past though.

Please give me your thoughts and opinions on this.

EDIT: I am not asking what a singleton is. And I consider a singleton bad practice when used imprperly which is in many many many cases. That is me. However, that is not what I am trying to discuss. I am trying to discuss THIS scenario I gave. Thanks.

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Imagine in the Global.asax.cs file I had an instance class as a private field, lets say like this:

private MyClass _myClass = new MyClass();

and I had on Global a static method called GetMyClass() that gets the current HttpApplication and returns that instance.

public static MyClass GetMyClass()
{
    return ((Global)HttpContext.Current.ApplicationInstance)._myClass;
}

So I could get the instance on the current requests httpapplication by calling Global.GetMyClass().

Keep in mind that there is more than 1 (Global)HttpApplication. There is an HttpApplication for each request and they are pooled/shared, so in the truest sense it is not a real singleton. But it does follow the pattern to a degree.

So as the question asked, would you consider this a Singleton, or at the very least the singleton pattern. Would you say it should not be used? Would you discourage its use? Would you say its a possibly bad practice like a true singleton.

Or would you say its not a true singleton so its ok, and not bad practice. Would you recommend this as a semi quasi singleton where an instance per request is required? If not what other pattern/suggestion would you use/give?

Have you ever used anything such as this?

I have used this on past projects but I am unsure if its a practice I should stay away from. I have never had any issues in the past though.

Please give me your thoughts and opinions on this.

EDIT: I am not asking what a singleton is. And I consider a singleton bad practice when used imprperly which is in many many many cases. That is me. However, that is not what I am trying to discuss. I am trying to discuss THIS scenario I gave. Thanks.

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