Possible Duplicate:
How do I mark a method as Obsolete/Deprecated? - C#
How do you mark a class as deprecated? I do not want to use a class any more in my project, but do not want to delete it before a period of 2 weeks.
Possible Duplicate:
How do I mark a method as Obsolete/Deprecated? - C#
How do you mark a class as deprecated? I do not want to use a class any more in my project, but do not want to delete it before a period of 2 weeks.
You need to use the [Obsolete]
attribute.
Example:
[Obsolete("Not used any more", true)]
public class MyDeprecatedClass
{
//...
}
The parameters are optional. The first parameter is for providing the reason it's obsolete, and the last one is to throw an error at compile time instead of a warning.
[Obsolete("Not used anymore",true)]
here suffers from two major flaws: 1. If the code is not used anymore it should be deleted 2. The explanation doesn't provide information of what to use/do instead.
false
) for "1 or 2 releases", mentioning that in the comment. Then change it to true
at the appropriate time, so those who are still using it will now get errors in their code and be forced to change. [Obsolete("Will be deprecated December 12, 2018. Use xyz instead.")]
then... [Obsolete("Method was deprecated December 12, 2018. Use xyz instead.", true)]
. That way it's clear. Then at another date you remove it completely.
As per Doak's answer, but the attribute's second parameter should be set to false if you want the code to compile:
[Obsolete("Not used any more", false)]
public class MyDeprecatedClass
{
//...
}
This will just throw warnings.
[Obsolete("Not used anymore")]
; personally I find this more readable without the boolean at the end.
The reason to not erase a class and deprecate instead is to adhere to some "politeness policies" when your code is an estabished API and then is consumed by third parties.
If you deprecate instead of erase, you give consumers a life cycle policy (e.g., maintenance and existence of the classes until version X.X) in order to allow them to plan a proper migration to your new API.
If you are using version control I would recommend just deleting the class. There is no reason to have unused code around.
Version control will be a handy undo if you decide later that you want the class.