My favorite trick is using the null coalesce operator and parens to automagically instantiate collections for me.
private IList<Foo> _foo;
public IList<Foo> ListOfFoo
{ get { return _foo ?? (_foo = new List<Foo>()); } }
----------
Please do not mistake this for the following
public IList<Foo> ListOfFoo
{ get { return _foo ?? new List<Foo>(); } }
My entry does the following:
1. Checks _foo for null
2. If null, assigns a new `List<Foo>` to _foo
3. Returns _foo
The second example does this:
1. Checks _foo for null
2. Returns a new `List<Foo>` if _foo is null
In other words, in my implementation
Assert.AreSame(instance.Foo, instance.Foo)
returns true. In the second implementation, it returns **FALSE**.
Doing it the second way will result in the following bug:
instance.Foo.Clear();
instance.Foo.Add(new Foo());
var kaboom = instance.Foo[0] // ArgumentOutOfRangeException