show/hide this revision's text 4 Note about breakpoint on setter.

There's a lot of advice out there that you shouldn't expose your fields publically, and instead use trivial properties. I see it over & over.

I understand the arguments, but I don't think it's good advice in most cases.

Does anyone have an example of a time when it really mattered? When writing a trivial property made something important possible in the future (or when failing to use one got them in to real trouble)?

EDIT: The DataBinding argument is correct, but not very interesting. It's a bug in the DataBinding code that it won't accept public fields. So, we have to write properties to work around that bug, not because properties are a wise class design choice.

EDIT: To be clear, I'm looking for real-world examples, not theory. A time when it really mattered.

EDIT: The ability to set a breakpoint on the setter seems valuable. Designing my code for the debugger is unfortunate: I'd rather the debugger get smarter, but given the debugger we have, I'll take this ability. Good stuff.

show/hide this revision's text 3 EDIT: clarify question.

There's a lot of advice out there that you shouldn't expose your fields publically, and instead use trivial properties. I see it over & over.

I understand the arguments, but I don't think it's good advice in most cases.

Does anyone have an example of a time when it really mattered? When writing a trivial property made something important possible in the future (or when failing to use one got them in to real trouble)?

EDIT: The DataBinding argument is correct, but not very interesting. It's a bug in the DataBinding code that it won't accept public fields. So, we have to write properties to work around that bug, not because properties are a wise class design choice.

EDIT: To be clear, I'm looking for real-world examples, not theory. A time when it really mattered.

show/hide this revision's text 2 Add note about DataBinding.

There's a lot of advice out there that you shouldn't expose your fields publically, and instead use trivial properties. I see it over & over.

I understand the arguments, but I don't think it's good advice in most cases.

Does anyone have an example of a time when it really mattered? When writing a trivial property made something important possible in the future (or when failing to use one got them in to real trouble)?

EDIT: The DataBinding argument is correct, but not very interesting. It's a bug in the DataBinding code that it won't accept public fields. So, we have to write properties to work around that bug, not because properties are a wise class design choice.

show/hide this revision's text 1