The .NET team could have gone ahead and allowed arbitrary expressions to be used as constants — e.g. new Vector2(0, 0)
if the Vector2
constructor was known to have no external side effects and the type was known to be a struct or otherwise immutable. But they simply didn't take the time to do this, perhaps because figuring out these requirements is extra work for the compilers (remember, C# has no immutable
or pure
keywords yet).
The string
type is special to the compiler and the runtime: it was designed from the start to be immutable and its constructors have no externally observable side-effects, so the creators of the .NET runtime baked this knowledge into the compiler. That's why string
has literals and gets special treatment.
Still, they probably wanted to avoid teaching the infrastructure too many special types — just a handful of fundamental types, namely primitives and strings. DateTime
simply wasn't deemed important enough to be included.
const string something = "testing";
and then you writeConsole.WriteLine(something)
, the compiler replaces it withConsole.WriteLine("testing")
. Strings are interned in C#, so no, duplicate constant strings will not take more memory. See stackoverflow.com/questions/16636363/…constant
.