show/hide this revision's text 2 Add link to MSDN with commentary about code readability.

Another obscure work-around to this problem is one spotted in the temporary Tuple class in the Managed Extensibility Framework (via Krzysztof Koźmic):

public struct TempTuple<TFirst, TSecond>
{
    public TempTuple(TFirst first, TSecond second)
    {
        this = new TempTuple<TFirst, TSecond>(); // Kung fu!
        this.First = first;
        this.Second = second;
    }

    public TFirst First { get; private set; }
    public TSecond Second { get; private set; }

(Full source code from Codeplex: Tuple.cs)

I also note that the documentation for CS0188 has been updated to add:

If you see this error when trying to initialize a property in a struct constructor, the solution is to change the constructor parameter to specify the backing field instead of the property itself. Auto-implemented properties should be avoided in structs because they have no backing field and therefore cannot be initialized in any way from the constructor.

So I take that to mean that the official guidance is to use old-style properties in your structs when you run in to this problem, which is probably less obscure (and more readible) than either of the other two alternatives explored so far.

show/hide this revision's text 1

Another obscure work-around to this problem is one spotted in the temporary Tuple class in the Managed Extensibility Framework (via Krzysztof Koźmic):

public struct TempTuple<TFirst, TSecond>
{
    public TempTuple(TFirst first, TSecond second)
    {
        this = new TempTuple<TFirst, TSecond>(); // Kung fu!
        this.First = first;
        this.Second = second;
    }

    public TFirst First { get; private set; }
    public TSecond Second { get; private set; }

(Full source code from Codeplex: Tuple.cs)